Winter/Spring 2016 - James A. Michener Art Museum
Transcription
Winter/Spring 2016 - James A. Michener Art Museum
The Magazine of the Michener Art Museum Winter/Spring Wintter/Spring 2016 P HILADELPHIA IN S TYLE: A Centur y of Fashion from the Robert and Penny Fox Historic Costume Collec tion, Drexel University | MichenerArtMuseum.org Q WINTER/SPRING 2016 | 2 EXHIBITIONS/ PROGRAMS Philadelphia in Style: A Century of Fashion 3-6 Holly Trostle Brigham: 7 Sisters and Goddesses Katharine Steele Renninger: Craft, Commitment, Community 8 Currently on View 9-11 Blanket Statements Paul Grand: Beyond the Surface Linden Frederick: Roadside Tales Coming Soon 12-13 Oh Panama! Jonas Lie Paints the Panama Canal Lloyd Ney: Local Color Steve McCurry: Unguarded, Untold, Iconic Public Programs 14 MUSIC AT THE MICHENER Jazz Nights Sunday Afternoon Music 16 17 DEVELOPMENT DIRECTOR’SSPOTLIGHT Welcome to a new year of stellar exhibitions, provocative programs, captivating music, and ever-expanding youth programming that keeps us energized through the winter months. The balmy conclusion to 2015 saw over 800 people attend our Holiday Open House, a collaboration with Mercer Museum, numerous school and adult tour groups enjoying the galleries and the outdoor sculpture gardens, and made us a delightful destination for those seeking an alternative to Black Friday shopping. The Museum was fortunate to enlist the services of Eiseman Construction to meticulously replace the original slate roof of the Warden’s House, constructed in 1884. New copper-lined gutters, rounded slate siding, and fresh paint for the soffits and windows will ensure the longevity of our beautiful entrance façade. The good weather helped this project to come in on time and on budget. Art of Wine 2015 18-19 Collector Series 20 Major Grant Award 20 Corporate Business Partners 21 Studio Visits 22 Member Receptions 22-23 News and Notes 24-26 Education 27 Art Classes 28 Community Programs 36 Get to Know Us 37 Calendar 38 Membership 39 In the midst of changing multiple exhibitions and opening our marquee installation, Blanket Statements: New Quilts by Kaffe Fassett and Historical Quilts from the Collection of the Quilt Museum and Gallery, York, UK, we welcomed two colleagues from the museum field for a site visit associated with our reaccreditation application with the American Alliance of Museums (AAM). The AAM is the national governing body for museums and its imprimatur through accreditation is an important endorsement. The Michener first achieved this honor in 2001. Our colleagues were thoroughly impressed with the Michener’s staff, board, volunteers, exhibitions, visitors, and physical facility from top to bottom. They will submit a report that will be reviewed by the Accreditation Commission in February 2016 and we will learn the outcome in early spring. Sign up for our monthly e-news at MichenerArtMuseum.org. 2016 also heralds transitions. We welcome several new staff members, introduced on page 25, and say farewell to long-term employee Erika Jaeger-Smith, who has been a part of the Museum’s growth for over 20 years. We extend our appreciation to Jeffrey A. Miller Catering for being a part of the evolution of the Edgar N. Putman Event Pavilion, our premiere space for events and rentals, and welcome Catering By Design to the Michener family. There is a 25% cancellation fee for programs and no refunds once the program begins. On the Cover: Hook & Knowles (England, 1850–c. 1930s), Shoes (detail), c. 1918, Polychrome silk brocade with silver kid, crystal, and metal, The Robert and Penny Fox Historic Costume Collection, Drexel University, Gift of Mrs. Upton Sullivan. Photo by Michael J. Shepherd. The Board of Trustees continues to grow with the addition of three new members, and a major transition in Board leadership will ensure continuity and strong oversight of this outstanding institution. We honored outgoing President/Incoming Chairman Louis E. Della Penna on December 14, 2015 with toasts of appreciation for his considerable efforts to steer the Museum through a physical and leadership transformation during his 2012-2015 tenure. The Della Penna President’s Award was also inaugurated to honor and reward a deserving Museum employee for his or her exceptional efforts throughout the year. Please join me in thanking Lou for his dedication to the Michener Art Museum. Annual Support provided by the Bucks County Commissioners and the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania Council on the Arts Lisa Tremper Hanover, Director & CEO Q | Winter/Spr ing 2016 Hook & Knowles (England, 1850–c. 1930s), Shoes, hoes, ca. 1918, Polychrome silk brocade with silver kid, crystal, and metal, Robert and Penny Fox Historic Costume Collection, Drexel University, Gift of Mrs. Upton Sullivan. Photo by Michael J. J Shepherd. Shepherd March 13–June 26, 2016 Paton | Smith | Della Penna-Fernbergerr Galleries When it comes to fashion, New York usually gets alll the attention. Philadelphia, however, has always been an important nt design center, an incubator for leading fashion design talent, and a home to stylish women. Many prominent Philadelphia women en were named to best-dressed lists over the years, causing famed Philadelphia retailer Nan Duskin Lincoln to remark: “[T]here is indeed deed a Philadelphia Look, and it is one of consummate good od taste, elegant and understated, the rare sort of elegance that is sensed immediately as well as seen.” She continued: ued: “Philadelphians love new fashions, daring fashions. They not only accept change, they embrace it—butt only if it is in good taste, and they make a fashion very individually their own just by the way they wearr it.” Philadelphia in Style celebrates this sartorial legacy with a display of approximately 30 dressed forms and additional dditional accessories spanning a century of high fashion. Featured tured are pieces from the late 19th to the late 20th centuries that were ere either worn by Philadelphia women (think Amanda Drexel Fell Cassatt satt in Callot-Soeurs), made in Philadelphia, or sold in one of its leading department epartment stores or specialty shops such as John Wanamaker, Strawbridge dge & Clothier, and Nan Duskin. The exhibition is co-organized with the e Robert and Penny Fox Historic Costume Collection (FHCC) at Drexel University. ersity. Documenting over four centuries of costume history, the FHCC holds more than 14,000 fashionable garments, accessories and other related materials and nd is a vital part of the design curriculum at the Westphal College of Media Arts and nd Design. Philadelphia in Style: A Century of Fashion is generously supported by Visit Bucks County. Tribout Shop at John Wanamaker (1861 – 1986), Hat, c. 1960, Wool and silk, Donor Unknown. For program registration and information: MichenerAr tMuseum.or g EXHIBITIONS/PROGRAMS A Century of Fashion Fash from the Robert and Penny Fox Historic Costume Costum Collection, Drexel Drex University | P HILADELPHIA IN S TYLE: 3 EXHIBITIONS/PROGRAMS | 4 P HILADELPHIA IN S TYLE: A Century of Fashion from the Robert and Penny Fox Historic Costume Collection, Drexel University Featured Exhibition Lectures The Century of the Designer (SA16-1) Tuesday, April 5, 1–2 pm Clare Sauro, Curator, the Robert and Penny Fox Historic Costume Collection (FHCC) $10 member/$20 non-member/ $5 student with valid ID, includes Museum admission. Advance registration required. An overview of the 20th Century’s great designers with particular emphasis on the early dominance of French Couture and the rise of international fashion in the postwar period as reflected in the exhibition Philadelphia in Style: A Century of Fashion from the Robert and Penny Fox Historic Costume Collection. The Woman of Fashion (SA16-2) Tuesday, April 12, 1–2 pm Clare Sauro, Curator, the Robert and Penny Fox Historic Costume Collection (FHCC) $10 member/$20 non-member/ $5 student with valid ID, includes Museum admission. Advance registration required. A presentation on the many fashionable women of the Philadelphia region whose garments are part of the FHCC such as Minnie Drexel Fell Cassatt, Mrs. T. Charlton Henry and Princess Grace of Monaco. Items from many of these women will be on display in Philadelphia in Style: A Century of Fashion from the Robert and Penny Fox Historic Costume Collection. Richard Tam (American, 1941–1990), Dress (detail), ca. 1968, Silk. Robert and Penny Fox Historic Costume Collection, Drexel University, Gift of Mrs. Robert L. McNeil, Jr. Purchased at Nan Duskin. Photo by Michael J. Shepherd. Undressing in Style: A Century of Underwear (SA16-3) Thursday, May 12, 7–8 pm Kristina Haugland, the Le Vine Associate Curator of Costume and Textiles and Supervising Curator for the Study Room, Philadelphia Museum of Art $10 member/$20 non-member/ $5 student with valid ID, includes Museum admission. Advance registration required. From corsets and bustles to bras and thongs—the 20th century saw remarkable changes in women’s underwear. This generously illustrated talk explores a hundred years of evolving feminine ideals and how these are reflected by the most intimate of apparel. 1936 April Harper’s Bazaar ad for Flexees Foundations (detail), PMA collection. Q | Winter/Spr ing 2016 Lovely To Look At: Fashion, Style and Glamour in American Popular Song (SA16-4) Sunday, April 3, 3–4:30 pm Fred Miller, pianist/singer/narrator $10 member/$20 non-member/$5 student with valid ID, includes Museum admission. Advance registration required. Behind-the-Scenes Tours of Regional Museum Fashion Collections Please join us for these private “behind-the-scenes” tours led by curators of regional museum fashion collections. Due to the exclusive nature of these tours, tickets are limited in number. $25 member/$30 non-member/$15 student with valid ID. Advance registration required. Transportation on your own; directions provided. The images of these deities continue to “step out of a dream,” not only in still photos and classic films but in words and music. Many celebrated song classics make direct reference to the accoutrements of fashion—Fred Astaire describing his ever-present “Top Hat, White Tie and Tails”—while other songs are so inextricably associated with specific, glamorous images that they might as well be visual—Rita Hayworth in black satin sheath and gloves delivering “Put The Blame On Mame.” On film, in photos, in dozens of great songs, the Golden Age of American Popular Song remains “lovely to look at, delightful to know, and heaven to kiss.” | The visual images of Broadway and Hollywood in its mid-twentieth century heyday continue to set the standard for what we consider “stylish, fashionable and glamorous.” In those years did most people lounge around their Park Avenue mansions in black tie and evening gowns as Claudette, Fred, Ginger, Irene and Cary did? Hardly, but it was fun and invigorating to dream about such a world existing. EXHIBITIONS/PROGRAMS Lecture in Song 5 The Robert and Penny Fox Historic Costume Collection – Drexel University (SA16-5) Clare Sauro, Curator Tuesday, April 19, 1–2:30 pm The Robert and Penny Fox Historic Costume Collection (FHCC) is one of Drexel University’s greatest treasures: an inspiration to fashionistas and scholars alike. Documenting more than four centuries of costume history, the Collection holds more than 14,000 fashionable garments and accessories, textiles and other related materials. Textile and Costume Collection – Philadelphia University (SA16-7) Marcella Martin, Curator Friday, April 8, 1–2:30 pm The fashion programs at Philadelphia University rank among the top regionally and internationally. The Textile and Costume Collection serves as a significant teaching resource for students, scholars and the public. The Design Center is located at Philadelphia University. Costume and Textiles – Philadelphia Museum of Art (SA16-8) Friday, June 17, 2–3:30 pm Kristina Haugland, the Le Vine Associate Curator of Costume and Textiles and Supervising Curator for the Study Room This opportunity to go behind the scenes at one of the oldest and largest costume and textiles collections in the country includes touring the department’s busy workrooms, state-of-the-art conservation lab, and a private visit to the Study Room to view selected highlights from the collection of 30,000 objects. For program registration and information: MichenerAr tMuseum.or g EXHIBITIONS/PROGRAMS | 6 P HILADELPHIA IN S TYLE: A Century of Fashion from the Robert and Penny Fox Historic Costume Collection, Drexel University Fashion Film Series Thursdays, April 7, 21, June 2, 16, 7 pm Free with Museum admission. Advance registration required. Galleries will remain open until 9 pm. Unzipped (SA16-9) Miramax, 1995, 76 minutes, rated R Thursday, April 7, 7 pm Scatter My Ashes at Bergdorf’s (SA16-11) One Entertainment, 2013, 93 minutes, rated PG-13 Thursday, June 2, 7 pm Directed by Douglas Keeve, this documentary takes a lighthearted inside look at the fashion industry and follows New York designer Isaac Mizrahi as he prepares to stage a fashion show. While the film avoids criticism and in-depth probing into Mizrahi, it does provide insight into the man’s creativity as he deftly deals with the chaos. Mizrahi narrates the film and frequently quotes famous lines from the old movies he dearly loves. Film clips from the movies are included. A chronicle of the Manhattan landmark and iconic high-end department store Bergdorf Goodman’s, Scatter My Ashes at Bergdorf’s includes interviews with Karl Lagerfeld, Oscar de la Renta, Vera Wang, Marc Jacobs, Diane von Furstenberg, and more. Directed by Matthew Miele, the film explores the history, inner workings and untold stories behind the store’s rise from a modest ladies’ tailor shop to a mirror of contemporary culture. The September Issue (SA16-10) IRIS (2015) (SA16-12) Lions Gate Films, Inc., 2009, 90 minutes, rated PG Thursday, April 21, 7 pm Magnolia Pictures, 83 minutes, rated PG-13 Thursday, June 16, 7 pm Vogue has been the most powerful and best-respected fashion magazine in the world for decades. The magazine devotes a fall issue to the designs and designers that the editors feel will be influential in the coming year. The September 2007 issue of Vogue became the biggest single issue in the magazine’s history. Filmmaker R.J. Cutler was given unprecedented access to the creative team as it was being prepared. The September Issue is a documentary that focuses on its editor Anna Wintour as she visits the annual Fashion Week shows, accepts or dismisses the latest creations of the biggest names in fashion, works with the models, photographers, and writers who help bring her vision to the page, and labors with her staff to determine what the world’s fashionistas will be wearing for the next 12 months. The September Issue received an award for excellence in documentary cinematography at its premiere at the 2009 Sundance Film Festival. IRIS pairs legendary 87-year-old documentarian Albert Maysles with Iris Apfel, the quick-witted, flamboyant 93-year-old style maven who has had an outsized presence on the New York fashion industry. More than a fashion film, the documentary is a story about creativity and how, even in Iris’ dotage, a soaring free spirit continues to inspire. IRIS portrays a singular woman whose enthusiasm for fashion, art and people are life’s sustenance and reminds us that dressing, and indeed life, is nothing but an experiment. Despite the abundance of glamour in her current life, she continues to embrace the values and work ethic established in her middleclass Queens upbringing during the Great Depression. “I feel lucky to be working. If you’re lucky enough to do something you love, everything else follows.” Q | Winter/Spr ing 2016 EXHIBITIONS/PROGRAMS Holly Trostle Brigham: Sisters and Goddesses February 20–May 29, 2016, Bette and Nelson Pfundt Gallery Nearly fifty years ago, Linda Nochlin published her now-famous essay “Why Have There Been No Great Women Artists?” Since then, we have seen women taking space for themselves in the art world. However, there are still obstacles for women. Nochlin’s charge that “women face up to the reality of their history and of their present situation without making excuses or puffing mediocrity” still rings true today. Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts-trained, Philadelphia-based artist Holly Trostle Brigham takes on that challenge in seven self-portraits in which she takes the guise of artists of the past—such as Frida Kahlo, Artemesia Gentileschi, and Tamara de Lempicka—to remind us of the stories of important women artists of the past. Brigham looks to her academic past as a student at one of the “seven sisters” colleges for women, Smith College, connecting those “sisters” with her own life through these portraits. Additional self-portraits remind us not only of women’s lives in the past, but also their continued relevance and importance in the lives of women today. The exhibition program in the Bette and Nelson Pfundt Gallery is presented by Vivian Banta and Robert Field. | Curated by Kirsten M. Jensen, Ph.D., Gerry & Marguerite Lenfest Chief Curator 7 Sophonsiba and Her Painted Ladies, 2008, watercolor on paper, 29 ½ x 29 ½ in. Collection of the artist, photograph by Kenneth Ek. Artist Conversation: Holly Trostle Brigham and Leo Mazow, Ph.D. (WA16-4) Wednesday, March 23, 1–2 pm $10 member/$20 non-member/$5 student with valid ID, includes Museum admission. Advance registration required. PAFA-trained and Philadelphia-based artist Holly Trostle Brigham and Leo Mazow, Associate Professor of Art History, University of Arkansas, discuss Brigham’s work in the exhibition Sisters and Goddesses on display in the Bette and Nelson Pfundt Gallery. Judith and Flora, 2003, watercolor on paper, 29 ½ x 29 ½ in. Private collection, photograph by Kenneth Ek. Holly Trostle Brigham is a figurative painter who creates mythical allegories of contemporary and historical subjects. Her paintings have won awards at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, the Lancaster Art Association, and for watercolor at the Harrisburg Art Association. Brigham’s work has been exhibited in New York, Washington, D.C., Massachusetts, Connecticut and Pennsylvania. A specialist in American art and cultural history, Leo Mazow came to the University of Arkansas in 2010 after eight years as curator of American Art at the Palmer Museum of Art at The Pennsylvania State University. He is the author of Thomas Hart Benton and the American Sound (Penn State University Press, 2012) and winner of the 25th Annual Charles C. Eldredge Prize for Distinguished Scholarship in American Art awarded by the Smithsonian American Art Museum. For program registration and information: MichenerAr tMuseum.or g EXHIBITIONS/PROGRAMS Curator’s Gallery Talk (WA16-3) Tuesday, March 29, 1–2 pm Liz K. Sheehan, Guest Curator | $10 member/$20 non-member/ $5 student with valid ID, includes Museum admission. Advance registration required. 8 Curator’s Conversation: Katharine Steele Renninger: Context and Community (SA16-13) Wednesday, May 4, 7–8 pm Katharine Steele Renninger (1925–2004), Morrell’s Spinning Wheel and Wool Winder, 1988, casein on linen canvas mounted on Masonite, H. 17.625 x W. 23.625 inches. James A. Michener Art Museum. Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph L. Wesley, Sr., on the occasion of a tribute to George Ermentrout. Photograph by Dara King. Katharine Steele Renninger: Craft, Commitment, Community March 26–June 12, 2016, Fred Beans Gallery Guest Curator, Liz K. Sheehan Katharine Steele Renninger (1925 – 2004), a devoted Bucks County native, dedicated her career to preserving in paint the achievements of its citizens: the honest craft and design found in architectural structures and handmade objects that represented a disappearing way of life. A 1946 graduate of Moore College of Art and Design in Philadelphia, Renninger developed a deep commitment to both her studio practice and to her community. She worked for decades to establish an arts center that would support the significant art history of the region, and eventually became a founding trustee of the James A. Michener Art Museum. This exhibition highlights the 2008 gift of Renninger’s estate to the Museum including a treasure trove of early sketchbooks, scrapbooks, and travel studies that trace her artistic and professional development. Archival materials and correspondence reveal why audiences continue to appreciate Renninger’s work today, finding in it a reflection of themselves, their values, and their childhood memories. A self-described “abstract realist,” Katharine Steele Renninger serves as a bridge between Bucks County’s art historical past and its present. Q | Winter/Spr ing 2016 $10 member/$20 non-member/$5 student with valid ID, includes Museum admission. Advance registration required. Galleries will remain open until 9 pm. Liz K. Sheehan, guest curator, joined by community representatives: • Bruce Katsiff, former director/CEO, Michener Art Museum (1989–2012) • Fran Orlando, director, exhibitions and Artmobile, Bucks County Community College, and member of the Bucks County Intermediate Unit Arts Education Trust Board • Barbara Swanda, author of the Renninger catalogue raisonné In this lecture, Sheehan will consider Renninger’s work in the context of American art history, the influences of her studies and travel, and her place in the “Genius Belt”—the legacy of the arts in Bucks County. Sheehan will be joined by several of Renninger’s friends and colleagues to discuss the artist’s deep involvement in building a local arts community, including her efforts to establish the James A. Michener Art Museum. New Quilts by Kaffe Fassett and Historical Quilts from the Collection of the Quilt Museum and Gallery, York, UK Through February 21, 2016, Paton | Smith | Della Penna-Fernberger Galleries On loan from The Quilters’ Guild of the British Isles/Kaffe Fassett Studios. Loan exhibition with curatorial oversight provided by Kirsten M. Jensen, Ph.D., Gerry & Marguerite Lenfest Chief Curator, and Louise Feder, Assistant Curator | The Michener Art Museum is one of only two museums in the U.S. to host this stellar textile exhibition of 35 historical quilts and contemporary patchwork with trans-Atlantic ties. 9 The exhibition features fifteen new patchwork pieces designed by the American-born, internationally-known textile artist Kaffe Fassett. These were created in response to fifteen historical quilts, dating from 1780 to 1949, from the Quilters’ Guild collection. Blanket Statements has strong local connections: three of five interpretations of Kaffe’s new designs that are also in the exhibition were designed by Bucks County artisans. Blanket Statements: New Quilts by Kaffe Fassett and Historical Quilts from the Collection of the Quilt Museum and Gallery, York, UK is generously supported by Visit Bucks County, The Coby Foundation, Ltd., and Penn Color, Inc. Additional support is provided by Bucks County Foundation, Silverman Family Partnerships, Harriet and Charles Ermentrout, Byrne Sewing Connection, and GloriousColor.com. In-kind media and promotional support is provided by Figmagazine.com and Mancuso Show Management. Kaffe Fassett (b. 1937), Sunshine Herringbone Stripes, 2014, 54 x 67 in. Designed by Kaffe Fassett. On loan from The Quilters’ Guild of the British Isles/Kaffe Fassett Studio. Photograph by Dave Tolson. English Paper Piecing Bi-monthly gathering of quilt makers led by Liza Lucy, Kaffe Fassett’s co-author and patchwork maker Select Wednesdays, 2–4 pm January 13 (65 E-3) January 27 (65 E-4) February 3 (65 E-5) February 17 (65 E-6) Enhance your visit with a mobile app for Blanket Statements Free with Museum admission. Advance registration required and limited. Paper pieces, notions and fabric will be available for purchase. Participants will learn how to do this popular traditional English patchwork method. You can also bring your own English paper piecing project to work on. Quilting Demonstrations by Area Quilt Guilds Free with Museum admission. No registration required. Visit website for more information: MichenerArtMuseum.org EXHIBITIONS/PROGRAMS Blanket Statements: In conjunction with the exhibition Blanket Statements: New Quilts by Kaffe Fassett and Historical Quilts from the Collection of the Quilt Museum and Gallery, York, UK, visitors can participate in a unique crowdsourced audio experience. This interactive app is available on iTunes and Google Play, and prompts visitors to record iT dG l Pl themselves in response to the works in the exhibition. Each recording is then combined into the app, allowing visitors in the exhibition to listen to other responses. As others contribute, the audio experience becomes more layered and complex. Visitors can also respond to the works via tablets in the exhibition. Be sure to join in the experience during your visit! For program registration and information: MichenerAr tMuseum.or g EXHIBITIONS/PROGRAMS | 10 Pattern Pieces Through January 31, 2016 Putman | Smith Gallery Curated by Louise Feder, Assistant Curator, and Kirsten M. Jensen, Ph.D., Gerry & Marguerite Lenfest Chief Curator An accompanying exhibition to Blanket Statements, Pattern Pieces: Can You Make a Quilt Out of Wood? examines pattern, shape, and color in contemporary art as it relates to quilts and their long history as both utilitarian and artistic objects. Spanning time and media, Pattern Pieces features work by James A. Michener, Virgil Marti, Elizabeth Osborne, Laura Petrovich-Cheney, and Alan Goldstein. This dynamic grouping of work by contemporary artists offers a unique look at the building blocks of visual art within the context of patchwork and quilting in American art. BYOB! Bring Your Own Blanket Interactive Gallery Talks in Putman Smith Gallery $10 member/$20 non-member/$5 student with valid ID, includes Museum admission. Advance registration required. Exhibiting artists Alan Goldstein and Laura Petrovich Cheney join Kirsten M. Jensen, Gerry & Marguerite Lenfest Chief Curator, and Louise Feder, Assistant Curator, in an informal gallery talk through the exhibition Pattern Pieces. Bring your own quilt and join the conversation. Alan Goldstein (WA16-1) Tuesday, January 19, 2016, 1–2 pm Laura Petrovich Cheney (WA16-2) Tuesday, January 26, 1–2 pm Studio Tour Alan Goldstein Studio Tour (SA16-14) Point Pleasant, PA Friday, April 15, 1–2:30 pm $20 member/$25 non-member/$10 student with valid ID, includes Museum admission. Advance registration required. Transportation on your own. Directions provided. Alan Goldstein is an abstract painter who works predominantly with paint, ink and mixed media. After initially studying architecture, Goldstein became interested in stage design, and subsequently in sculpture and painting. He has experimented with diverse media, including tar, rope, steel and fabric. Goldstein describes his work as “relating to the human figure and the human psyche, and the landscape as the larger self.” Q | Winter/Spr ing 2016 Laura Petrovich-Cheney, Barn Razing, 2012, salvaged barn wood, 30” square This piece was inspired by The Log Cabin quilt tradition that originated from Abraham Lincoln’s 1860 “log cabin” campaign. Youth Audio Tour You Exp Experience a special interactive audio tour for younger visitors developed tou by thirteen students in the Michener’s Stu Student Docent program. This tour fe features objects from the permanent collection including, but not limited co tto, works by Edward Redfield, Daniel Garber, Phillip L. Powell, Fern D Coppedge, Mark Sfirri and many more. Various styles, subjects and movements are represented in the tour, allowing for younger visitors to make connections to works in the galleries. Experience th the h tour b by visiting: http://spts.us/mam. During your visit, scan a QR code next to the work to hear the specific audio stop. EXHIBITIONS/PROGRAMS Linden Frederick: Roadside Tales Through March 13, 2016 Fred Beans Gallery Curated by Lisa Tremper Hanover, Director & CEO Frederick takes us on a journey through small towns with empty streets, past trailer parks, abandoned gas stations, and small suburban homes that are illuminated by the flickering lights of television screens. Frederick fixes our attention on what he wants us to see, giving access to otherwise intimate spaces and private worlds by tapping into our subconscious, merging imagination with memory. In the moments that we stand in front of his works, we see ordinary places and objects transformed into scenes of beauty. | Painter Linden Frederick employs a highly skilled brush to his oils of rural settings, manipulating the quality of light from natural and artificial sources with a sense of isolation and beauty. 11 Linden Frederick (b. 1953), Study for Wedding Night, 2004, oil on linen, 10 ½ x 10 ½ inches. © Linden Frederick, Courtesy of Forum Gallery, New York, Collection of Jonas and Jackie Havens Linden Frederick: Roadside Tales is generously supported by Melinda and Ted Tally. Paul Grand: Beyond the Surface Through February 7, 2016 Commonwealth Gallery; Bette and Nelson Pfundt Gallery Curated by Lisa Tremper Hanover, Director & CEO Paul Grand (b.1941), Autumn Trees, 2013, Kodak Endura paper, Mexico City, Mexico. © Paul Grand Artist Gallery Talk Wednesday, January 6, 1 pm, Saturday, January 16, 1 pm Saturday, January 23, 1 pm, Saturday, February 6, 1 pm Join noted photographer Paul Grand for a gallery talk about the exhibition Paul Grand: Beyond the Surface, and stay for a follow-up chat with the artist. After a successful professional career with Colgate-Palmolive, Paul Grand began an odyssey of making images that focus on rich color, jarring contrasts, architectural renderings, and the play of textures, light and shadow on impervious surfaces. His approach is painterly, referencing the color field painters Mark Rothko and Barnett Newman, and spaces are angular, structured, and rhythmic. His travels to Morocco, India, and especially Mexico are cultural explorations that inform a compositional approach almost devoid of human presence, yet man-made references populate the images in the form of industrial objects, concrete, wiring, molded tin and peeling paint. The exhibition program in the Bette and Nelson Pfundt Gallery is presented by Vivian Banta and Robert Field. For program registration and information: MichenerAr tMuseum.or g EXHIBITIONS/PROGRAMS | 12 Coming Soon: Steve McCurry Unguarded, Untold, Iconic: Afghanistan through the Lens of Steve McCurry July 16–October 23, 2016 Paton | Smith | Della PennaFernberger Galleries Co-Curated by Kelsey Halliday Johnson, Curatorial Fellow in Photography and New Media, and Louise Feder, Assistant Curator Best known for his 1985 National Geographic cover photograph Afghan Girl, Philadelphia-born and Exton-based photographer Steve McCurry continues to fascinate with his stunning photographs of locations from around the globe. This exhibition will highlight images taken throughout his decades-long relationship with Afghanistan, its landscape and, most importantly, its people. Visitors will be able to view both new and familiar photographs and experience Afghanistan through McCurry’s thought-provoking and visually arresting lens. Afghan Girl, 1984, Photo courtesy of Steve McCurry © Q | Winter/Spr ing 2016 Lloyd Ney: Oh Panama!: Local Color Jonas Lie Paints the Panama Canal June 4 – September 11, 2016 Putman | Smith Gallery Curated by Louise Feder, Assistant Curator Lloyd Raymond Ney (1893-1965), Mechanics Street, New Hope, ca. 1934, oil on canvas, H. 30 x W. 36 inches. James A. Michener Art Museum. Gift of Marguerite and Gerry Lenfest. Lloyd Raymond “Bill” Ney (1902–1987) was an American painter, sculptor, writer, and artistic innovator known for pushing boundaries, embracing Modernism, and stirring up controversy. He maintained close friendships with artists working in Philadelphia and Bucks County, including George Nakashima, Charles Evans, Louis Stone and Harry Rosen, and had a close association with Baroness Hilla von Rebay of the Guggenheim Museum. His career took him to places throughout the country and the world, participating in a variety of artistic scenes, but he always came home to New Hope, PA. His connection to the town is well known locally, but his work has never been exhibited together since the artist’s death. Local Color will feature his paintings documenting life along the Delaware River, New Hope’s inhabitants, and ambitious, detailed plans for his ultimately never-realized legacy: a museum devoted to Ney’s own art in his home town. EXHIBITIONS/PROGRAMS Coming Soon: June 25–October 9, 2016 Fred Beans Gallery Organized by the Hudson River Museum and the James A. Michener Art Museum: Kirsten M. Jensen, Ph.D., Gerry & Marguerite Lenfest Chief Curator, James A. Michener Art Museum, and Bartholomew Bland, Deputy Director, Hudson River Museum | Coming Soon: 13 Jonas Lie (1880-1940), Canal at the Bottom of Culebra, 1913, oil on canvas, 30 x 36 inches, courtesy of the West Point Museum Collection, United States Military Academy, West Point, New York. Oh Panama!: Jonas Lie Paints the Panama Canal looks back to the determined and spirited efforts of engineers and workers building the Panama Canal as captured in paintings by the Norwegian-born artist Jonas Lie (1880 –1940). The thirty known pictures Lie made of Panama capture the spirit of the endeavor, its heroic quality, and monumental scale. Lie’s paintings, twelve of which are in the collection of the West Point Museum, continue today to impress viewers as a sublime and beautiful document of man’s relentless quest to conquer nature and harness its riches. Recognized by his peers as a scientist and a poet for his depictions of New York City, Lie’s canvasses were both historical documents of technological progress and dramatic interpretations of the urban environment. Co-organized with the Hudson River Museum, the exhibition will be on view at the Hudson River Museum February 7 – May 8, 2016, and will then travel to the Michener, where it will be on view June 25 – October 9, 2016. Jonas Lie (1880-1940), Heavenly Host (Heavenly Hoist), 1913, oil on canvas, 50 x 60 inches, courtesy of the West Point Museum Collection, United States Military Academy, West Point, New York. For program registration and information: MichenerAr tMuseum.or g Sign up early — programs sell out quickly. Advance registration required and limited. Transportation on your own; directions provided. | PUBLIC PROGRAMS Bucks County Artists Studio Tours 14 Ben Solowey, Rae Seated (Green Dress), 1935, oil on canvas, H. 45 x W. 36 inches, James A. Michener Art Museum. Museum purchase funded by Anne and Joseph Gardocki. The Studio of Ben Solowey Bedminster, PA Friday, June 10, 10:30 am– noon (SA16-18) $20 member/$25 non-member/$10 student with valid ID Nakashima Studio Tour Saturday, May 14, 10:30 am–12:30 pm (SA16-16) Saturday, July 16, 10:30 am–12:30 pm (SA16-17) Saturday, October 15, 10:30 am–12:30 pm (FA16-1) $45 member/$55 non-member, includes tour and lunch A behind-the-scenes, private tour of the Nakashima Studio. In 1946, George Nakashima established his woodworking shop on Aquetong Road in New Hope, PA. The studio still produces custom-designed furniture under the guidance of his daughter Mira and son Kevin, and includes elegantly designed buildings and landscaped gardens. Boxed lunch will be served on the beautiful grounds of the Studio. Q | Winter/Spr ing 2016 Reserve a place for this intimate tour led by David Leopold, Director of the Studio of Ben Solowey, the only remaining intact studio from the Golden Age of Bucks County art. Located on a 34-acre farm in Bedminster, the views from the studio are virtually the same as when Solowey arrived in 1936. The artist felt he saw a landscape to paint every time he looked out his studio window. “When you visit the studio of Ben Solowey, you do more than see an exhibition, you enter an artist’s world,” wrote the late Edward Sozanski, Philadelphia Inquirer art critic. “The charm of [the Studio] is its sense of intimacy and immediacy. Nothing is under glass or roped; rather, it conveys the uncanny feeling that Solowey has just stepped away from his easel and will be back any minute—you couldn’t imagine wanting to be anywhere else.” PUBLIC PROGRAMS | 1515 Steve Tobin, Steelroot sculptures, Photograph by Kenneth Ek Studio of Steve Tobin Located in Quakertown, PA Friday, June 3, 10 am–noon (SA16-19) $20 member/$25 non-member/$10 student with valid ID Internationally recognized for his strong yet elegant interpretations of elements from the natural world, Tobin received well-earned recognition in his hometown with the 2014 exhibition at the Michener. Out of this World: Works by Steve Tobin featured his monumental Steelroots, Exploded Earth vessels, and intricate Forest Floors bronzes from the Earth Bronzes series. Tobin was originally known for his glasswork, but more recently, epic sculptures in bronze and steel has been the focus of his attention. Join Steve on a tour of his impressive Quakertown studio and learn about his evolving work. My OMEI: Observe, Meditate, Experience, Internalize First and third Sundays of the month, 3–4 pm (64O) Free with Museum admission. Advance registration suggested. This innovative program was developed to cultivate the art of looking closely and feeling deeply through meditation and focused reflection on art. The galleries are the perfect places to help bring the focus to you and connect with others through the art. A great way to relax and recharge! For program registration and information: MichenerAr tMuseum.or g | M U S I C AT T H E M I C H E N E R 16 Music at the Michener Jazz Night Purchase tickets early—programs sell out quickly. Jazz Night is an all-inclusive evening featuring: 8–10 pm, Hors d’oeuvre reception and open galleries Hearty appetizers and desserts presented by Havana Catering. Refreshments presented by River Horse Brewing Company and Sand Castle Winery. 8:30–11 pm, Concert with one intermission Tickets: All reserved table seating. $45 member/$53 non-member /$25 student with paying adult. Seats are assigned in order of purchase. Please make seating requests at time of purchase (we will do our best to accommodate you). Reception and Museum admission are included in ticket price. Advance tickets only. This program is generously sponsored by the Friends of Jazz Night. Terry Klinefelter and Friends (WA16-5) Saturday, February 27, 8–11 pm Terry Klinefelter and Friends Terry Klinefelter, piano; Byron Landham, drums; John Swana, valve trombone; Bob Meashey, trumpet; Christian and Paul Klinefelter, bass. Pianist and Steinway Artist Dr. Terry Klinefelter is a versatile artist, at home in jazz clubs and on the classical concert stage. She has performed at the Kimmel Center, the Philadelphia Fringe Festival, and Chadds Ford Winery Jazz Festival, as well as with the Philadelphia Orchestra Chamber Music Series and abroad in Mexico and Italy. She has also collaborated with dance companies, serving as pianist with the Pennsylvania Ballet and with the Central Pennsylvania Youth Ballet. Klinefelter is assistant professor of piano and jazz studies at West Chester University. As a recording artist, she has performed as a sideman, and also on her own debut trio CD, Simple Gifts (described by the Philadelphia Inquirer as “on the cosmic cusp where Mozart might meet Mingus”). Her 2013 release, Zingaro, features original jazz compositions and standards, and several new songs based on the works of renowned poet Dana Gioia. It reached #30 on the national jazz radio charts, and was featured on Radio WRTI’s “Hot 11” Countdown for several months. Mike Boone and Friends (SA16-15) Saturday, May 21, 8–11 pm John Swana, valve trombone; Tim Brey, piano; Anwar Marshall, drums; Mike Boone, basses. Bassist Mike Boone, a New Yorker and Eastman School of Music graduate, came to Philadelphia fresh off a second stint with drummer Buddy Rich in 1985 and stayed put. Boone joined the Philly jazz scene as part of a coterie of young bass players (Darryl Hall, Steve Beskrone, Lee Smith) who made the switch from electric to upright bass. Over the years, Boone emerged as a jazz engine in town, a quiet force humming with legions of fans and young musicians. He’s a mentor to the “next generation.” Boone is on the faculty of Temple University teaching bass. He is also on the Board of Jazz Bridge, a non-profit organization that helps musicians in crisis. His latest release is Heart & Soul. Mike Boone and Friends Q | Winter/Spr ing 2016 Concerts are held in the Edgar N. Putman Event Pavilion $15 member/$20 non-member/$5 student with valid ID, includes Museum admission. Galleries are open until 5 pm. Advance registration suggested. | M U S I C AT T H E M I C H E N E R Sunday Afternoon Music at the Michener 17 Titans of Song: A Musical Tribute to Paul Robeson and Marian Anderson (WA16-6) Sunday, February 21, 3–4:30 pm Follow the Drinking Gourd Join us for this multimedia performance set decades ago in America when two African-Americans challenged the Jim Crow segregation rampant in the land from the unlikely barricades of the classical concert stage. Both Paul Robeson, who hailed from Princeton and graduated valedictorian in his class from Rutgers, and Marian Anderson, the pride of South Philadelphia, became world-famous singers at a time when crossing color lines was risky business. They both inspired America to become more tolerant. An engrossing narrative and historic images will evoke Robeson and Anderson’s 1930s – 1950s heydays from spirituals to songs like “Ave Maria” and Showboat’s famous “Ol’ Man River.” Popular selections by George Gershwin will put the era into perspective by illustrating what else people were listening to at the time. Follow the Drinking Gourd, a musical group composed of singers Ivan Woods and Shannon Hunt and pianist Diane Goldsmith, takes its name from the song used to guide slaves to freedom on the Underground Railroad. The group has performed at the Smithsonian American Art Museum and has garnered rave reviews for appearances at scores of other museums, cultural centers and colleges. For program registration and information: MichenerAr tMuseum.or g DEVELOPMENT Art of Wine 2015 Signature Fundraising Event Is the Most Successful in Michener’s History | Art of Wine was celebrated on Saturday, October 17, at the Michener Art Museum. This biennial event has become the signature fundraiser for the Museum. Blending an unforgettable evening of fine wines, haute cuisine and lively auctions, the goal of raising critical support for the Museum’s exhibitions and education programs was handily met and exceeded! 18 This festive occasion culminated in a live auction presided over by auctioneers and wine aficionados David Rago and Suzanne Perrault, Partners and Co-Directors, of Rago Arts and Auction Center. The live auction featured Pennsylvania Impressionist art, exclusive wine lots from private cellars, and unique experience and destination packages. A special appeal was made to purchase a new truck, replacing a well-worn bucket of bolts. Fred Beans Family of Dealerships stepped up with a lead gift. Twenty-nine more generous donors pledged their support, for a total of $40,550, to provide a better, safer mode of transport for the Michener’s works of art. Tom and Cathi Chuck, and Alison and Jason Rose of The Rose Group. Special thanks to the participating vintners: Alain Blanchon Selection, Duckhorn Wine Company, Flowers Vineyards & Winery, Louis Latour, Inc., St. Francis Winery and Vineyards and Stag’s Leap Wine Cellars. Floral arrangements were created by Doylestown Floribunda. Dinner was provided by Catering By Design, complemented by wine pairings from acclaimed Flowers Vineyards & Winery. The Michener thanks Co-Chairs Louis and Carol Della Penna, the Host Committee, and all attendees for making this year’s event a wonderful success. Dr. Richard Greenberg, Liz Rizor, and Paula Della Penna. Kirsten Jensen, Jeff Ladouceur of SEI, and Lou Della Penna. SEI—Grand Marque Sponsor—table with gifts from Tiffany & Co. Live auction bidders responding to our special pledge for a new truck. The Edgar N. Putman Event Pavilion at sunset. Silent Auction, Art of Wine 2015. Bob and Joyce Byers with Dave Zaborowski of Doylestown Floribunda, who greatly enhanced the ambiance of the event with his gorgeous floral arrangements. Q | Winter/Spr ing 2016 DEVELOPMENT | Beth Beans Gilbert, Virginia Sigety, and Lou Della Penna joined forces to raise funds for a new art transport truck. Pamela and Bob Byers. Alard and Susan Hanover, Lisa Tremper Hanover, and Steve Hanover. Barbara and Jay Belding. Maureen and Greg Church. Thank You to our Art of Wine Sponsors! Grand Marque Presenter PHOTOS: ALLURE WEST STUDIOS Syd and Sharon Martin. Dueling auctioneers Suzanne Perrault and David Rago. Premier Cru Sponsors Louis and Carol Della Penna Lauren and Don Morel Penn Color, Inc. Grand Cru Sponsors Bob and Joyce Byers Kathy and Ted Fernberger Syd and Sharon Martin The Rose Group Univest Bank and Trust New Vintage Sponsors Bill & Karen Aichele Jay & Barbara Belding Barbara Donnelly Bentivoglio & Dr. Lamberto Bentivoglio Anne & Ben Bugajewski Whitney & Christopher Chandor Gregory & Maureen Church Suzanne & Norman Cohn Delaware Valley Concrete Co. Doylestown Health E.C. Bentz Electrical Contractors, Inc. Kristina Harshany and Terri Ann Di Julio of SEI. Jim Flynn & Sue Johnson Tony & Jane Ford-Hutchinson Fred Beans Family of Dealerships Lisa & Stephen Hanover Don & Lynn Martin Haskin Mary & Dennis Helf Sally & Richard Henriques Jane & Mal Jozoff Bruce Long & Mark Todaro John & Carol McCaughan State Senator Chuck McIlhinney Carol & Tom Nelson Chip & Beth Ott Henry & Betsy Pfeiffer PNC Wealth Management Stephen Raab & Marie Brickley-Raab Linda & Jim Rutkosky Virginia & Neal Sigety Herman Silverman Michael & Tammy Simpson Dr. Vail Garvin Unterberger US Trust, Bank of America Private Wealth Management Bob & Amy Welch Marvin & Dee Ann Woodall Carolyn & Wayne Yetter Jennifer & Matthew Zelesko Thanks to the following for their event support: DOYLESTOWN MichenerAr tMuseum.or g 19 DEVELOPMENT | 20 2015 Collector Series Inaugurated in the fall of 2014, the Collector Series continued this year with exclusive events at the homes of three private collectors and friends of the Museum. The Collector Series featured Kirsten M. Jensen, Ph.D., the Michener’s Gerry & Marguerite Lenfest Chief Curator, in conversation with local collectors and enthusiasts. These intimate gatherings are designed to highlight the art of collecting by experiencing new works and a passion for building a personal collection. Guests enjoyed a sumptuous buffet and engaging conversation with the hosts, corporate supporters, Dr. Jensen, and other attendees. For more information or an invitation to the Collector Series in 2016, contact Laurie McGahey, Senior Director of Advancement at 215.340.9800 x161 or lmcgahey@ michenerartmuseum.org. The 2015 Collector Series was generously supported by SEI. James A. Michener Art Museum Awarded Major Grant from The Pew Center for Arts & Heritage The James A. Michener Art Museum was the recipient of a major grant of $300,000 from The Pew Center for Arts & Heritage for Charles Sheeler: Fashion, Photography, and Sculptural Form (March 19–July 22, 2017), a ground-breaking exploration of Sheeler’s fashion and portrait photography for Condé Nast between 1926 and 1931. This body of work—previously considered purely commercial and routinely dismissed— will be re-examined and recontextualized, revealing a critical juncture in the development of Sheeler’s aesthetic vision that would guide and inform the rest of his artistic career. Mme Lassen seated in armchair, wearing felt hat with upturned brim forming points at the Michener’s Assistant Curator Louise Feder with Jane Yeuroukis and Blanche Vilade at Bonnie O’Boyle’s home. Descendants of artist John Folinsbee and Peter Cook, the McConaughy-Cook family continues to preserve their legacy and serve as stewards of this remarkable art collection for generations to come. Major support from sides, designed by Reboux, and velvet dress with The Pew Center lace-scarf-tie and deep lace cuff, 1928. Vogue, September 1928, Condé Nast Archives. Charles for Arts & Heritage Sheeler / Vogue; © Condé Nast will enable the Michener Art Museum to expand its diverse and creative programming, produce a fully illustrated catalogue, and present a scholarly symposium. The multi-disciplinary and interactive exhibition will include photographs, paintings, sculpture, and period fashions displayed on mannequins, dramatically staged and lit to replicate Sheeler’s photographic strategies. The Pew Center for Arts & Heritage is a multidisciplinary grantmaker and hub for knowledge sharing, funded by The Pew Charitable Trusts, and dedicated to fostering a vibrant cultural community in Greater Philadelphia. The Center fulfills this mission by investing in ambitious, imaginative arts and heritage projects that showcase the region’s cultural vitality and enhance public life, and by engaging in an exchange of ideas concerning artistic and interpretive practice with a broad network of cultural leaders. For more information, visit pcah.us. Major support for Charles Sheeler: Fashion, Photography and Sculptural Form has been provided by The Pew Center for Arts & Heritage. Q | Winter/Spr ing 2016 Another Remarkable Year! Members of the Corporate Business Partner Program enjoy a full year of networking events, social gatherings, exhibition receptions, and much more. Thank you to all of our Corporate Business Partners—you play an invaluable role in the Michener’s growth and continued success. The Michener will host a reception on Thursday, January 21, from 5 to 6:30 pm to welcome new members. Michener Art Museum Director & CEO Lisa Tremper Hanover will lead a tour for attendees through the gallery, meeting, and reception spaces. 2015 Corporate Business Partners Recognition Luncheon Acknowledging Our Loyal Partners Members of the Bucks County business community gathered on September 15 for a luncheon to acknowledge their commitment to the Michener Art Museum. The Corporate Business Partner Program (CBP) represents a dynamic collaboration between the Museum and the community. Business Partners serve as advocates for the Museum throughout the region and their long-term commitment supports the Michener in all of its activities — the acquisition of artworks, the education programs that serve more than 12,000 K-12 students yearly, and the outstanding roster of exhibitions and public programs that attracts more than 135,000 visitors annually. PHOTO: ALLURE WEST STUDIOS Jane M. Yeuroukis, Inc. was recognized for sponsoring the event—a luncheon provided by Jeffrey A. Miller Catering Co. Guest speakers included Rick Millham, Chairman of the Advisory Board of the CBP; Louis Della Penna, President of the Board of Trustees; Lisa Tremper Hanover; and Herman Silverman, Chairman Emeritus of the Board of Trustees, one of the Museum’s founders, and founder of the Corporate Business Partner Program in 1989. Congratulations to the 2015 Honorees for their exceptional length of service to the James A. Michener Art Museum: | New CBP Members Reception—January 21 DEVELOPMENT Michener’s Corporate Business Partner Program: TEN YEARS Annie Hauls Antheil, Maslow & MacMinn, LLP Ben Meadows, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices, Fox & Roach Realtors Bucks County Herald FREEMAN’S Jules Thin Crust Penn Foundation Stonehouse Bindery Upstairs Downstairs Interiors FIFTEEN YEARS 3D Printing and Digital Imaging Bucks Country Gardens, Ltd. Doylestown Floribunda The Fretz Corporation Gratz Gallery & Conservation Studio Landscape Design Group, Inc. Main Street Abstract Company Steely & Smith, LLC Steve Darlington Team, Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices, Fox & Roach Realtors TD Bank TWENTY YEARS Bruce Norman Long Interior Design Chandler Hall Health Services Charter Management Corporation Doylestown Radiology Associates Dr. & Mrs. Albert Ruenes, Jr. Eiseman Construction Company, Inc. First Federal of Bucks County Gamburg’s Furniture, Inc. Heller’s Seafood Market, Inc. Hugh A. Marshall/Landscape Contractor, Inc. J. Carroll Molloy, Real Estate Kay Lopata Fine Art Kruse Tool & Die, Inc. Lambertville Station Malmark, Inc. National Penn Penn’s Grant Corporation Penn’s Grant Realty Corp. The Piper Group, Inc. Pritchard, Bieler, Gruver & Willison, P.C. Rutherford’s Camera Shop Sanford Alderfer Auction Co. Inc. Univest Bank and Trust William L. Goldman Law Offices TWENTY-FIVE + YEARS Advent Security Corporation Foundations Community Partnership Happ Contractors. Inc. Millham Insurance Agency Penn Color, Inc. Silverman Family Partnerships Wesley Enhanced Living at Heritage Towers JOIN! To become a Corporate Business Partner, please contact Molly Dougherty at mdougherty@michenerartmuseum.org or 215.340.9800 x120, or join online at MichenerArtMuseum.org Corporate Business Partner Program Honorees, members of the Corporate Business Partner Program Advisory Board, and members of the Michener Art Museum’s Board of Trustees. For more information: MichenerAr tMuseum.or g 21 DEVELOPMENT | PHOTOS: ALLURE WEST STUDIOS 22 Elizabeth Osborne Private Studio Visits Veils of Color: Juxtapositions and Recent Work by Elizabeth Osborne, was on view from July 25 through November 15 in the Fred Beans Gallery. The exhibition garnered excellent reviews by members of the media and much attention from audiences familiar with Liz, a longtime teacher at PAFA, friend, and prolific artist who is a revered pillar of the Philadelphia artist community. Osborne graciously opened her home and studio in Philadelphia’s Fairmount neighborhood to tours for members and exhibition sponsors. Attendees were charmed by the extraordinary, light-filled space, and an endless stream of anecdotes from the artist. Norman Rosenthal, Kirsten Jensen, Ron Wertheim, Liz Osborne, Bayard Storey, Caryl Rosenthal, Louise Feder, and Bonnie O’Boyle. Q | Winter/Spr ing 2016 Paul Grand with reception guests Madelyn Rose Munshower and John Munshower. Members Reception for Paul Grand: Beyond the Surface On Friday, October 23, a lively group attended the opening reception for Paul Grand: Beyond the Surface (on view through February 7). This exhibition features large format photographs with distinctly brash colors, jarring contrasts, architectural renderings, and the play of textures, light and shadow on impervious surfaces. Lisa Tremper Hanover, Michener Director & CEO, with Paul Grand. DEVELOPMENT Members Reception for Blanket Statements and Pattern Pieces | A members-only reception was held on November 13 for the opening of Blanket Statements: New Quilts by Kaffe Fassett and Historical Quilts from the Collection of the Quilt Museum and Gallery, York, UK and its accompanying exhibition, Pattern Pieces: Can You Make a Quilt Out of Wood? Blanket Statements (on view through February 21) features fifteen new quilts designed by the American-born, internationally-known textile artist Kaffe Fassett, along with fifteen historical quilts dating from 1780 to 1949. Pattern Pieces (on view through January 31) features works by James A. Michener, Virgil Marti, Elizabeth Osborne, Laura Petrovich-Cheney, and Alan Goldstein. 23 Brandon Mably, Kaffe Fassett, Kirsten Jensen, and Lisa Tremper Hanover. S AT U R D AY, M AY 14 PHILADELPHIA IN STYLE PHOTOS: DARA N. KING PHOTOGRAPHY Fashion Benefit Event For more information, call Laurie McGahey at 215.340.9800 x161 A family stands with the simulated trees of A Forest of Glass by Alan Goldstein. For more information: MichenerAr tMuseum.or g 4 The Board of Trustees overwhelmingly approved the appointment of Mary C. Helf and Christine Taylor to three-year terms as trustees. Mary Helf, Senior Counsel at Fox Rothschild, LLP, has been a member of the Corporate Business Partner Program for more than 20 years and served recently as Membership Chair of the Advisory Board. She has been a dynamic and dedicated supporter of the Museum and its programs. | NEWS & NOTES Appointments to the Board of Trustees 24 “It is an honor and privilege to serve on this Board of Trustees,” said Helf. “I am eager to participate in the continued growth and prosperity of the Museum. I hope to help advance its tradition of presenting extraordinary exhibitions and educational programs to our community and beyond.” Mary C. Helf Christine Taylor is the President of CTC Merchandising, US/Hong Kong, which is headquartered in Doylestown, PA. Taylor has been an exhibition sponsor and community advocate for the Museum for many years. She was instrumental in the Miles of Mules program; her sponsored mule now resides at the Museum. Christine is Christine Taylor a 2013 Lifetime Achievement Award recipient from the Central Bucks Chamber of Commerce as an Ambassador of Bucks County. “It is truly an honor to be appointed to the Board at the Michener,” said Taylor. “The Museum is a vibrant part of the art world at large and an important cultural anchor in our community. I look forward to being an integral part of its continued growth.” Fresh Fare: The Michener Partners with Catering By Design We are very pleased to welcome Catering By Design to the Michener Art Museum. As our new cuisine partner, Catering By Design (CBD) will be running the Museum café, and will serve as the official event caterer for all Museum rentals, including weddings, mitzvahs, business conferences, and other special gatherings held in the Putman Pavilion, outdoor sculpture garden, and galleries. Catering By Design was founded in 1991 by Peter Loevy, a graduate of Colgate University and The Restaurant School and a seasoned veteran of the restaurant and catering Q | Winter/Spr ing 2016 industry. Seven years later, Loevy partnered with Daniel Love, who brought a background of expertise in theater, hospitality, and museum catering. This complementary combination of culinary, design, and hospitality experiences has made Catering By Design one of Philadelphia’s preeminent event coordinators. With custom menus inspired by dishes and flavors from around the world, Catering By Design skillfully infuses tastes and flavors of the cuisine with overall conceptual design. “We respect how flavors, like people, interact,” said Loevy. “This philosophy helps us execute each event with the perfect amount of style and flair, from understated and elegant to spectacular and dramatic.” Featuring farm-to-table cuisine, many of the ingredients being sourced locally, the café will offer a changing blackboard-style menu to include seasonal preparations, sandwiches and baked goods. The café is open Tuesday through Friday from 9 am to 3 pm; Saturday from 10 am to 3 pm; and Sunday from noon to 3 pm. For more information about renting the Michener for special events, contact Hollie Brown at hbrown@ michenerartmuseum.org or 215.340.9800 x151. NEWS & NOTES welcome Kelsey Halliday Johnson joined the Michener in October 2015 as our first Curatorial Fellow in Photography and New Media. This is a two-year renewable appointment generously funded by a donor invested in providing a forum for new and expanded scholarship and access to this medium. Kelsey comes to us from Locks Gallery in Philadelphia, where she served in a curatorial role for the past three years. She has also been active as a curator and director of events at Vox Populi, Philadelphia’s leading venue for the cutting-edge in performance art. She is a practicing photographer and mixed media artist, and brings a unique curatorial eye that is steeped in both historical practice and contemporary developments. She will develop focused exhibitions for the Bette & Nelson Pfundt Gallery and contribute content to larger, multidisciplinary installations initiated by the curatorial department. Anna Kelly also joined the curatorial team as Registrar in October 2015. She is responsible for both exhibitions and collections registrarial duties, and worked closely with the curatorial team in preparation for the AAM site visit in December. Anna comes to the Michener from Rago Arts & Auction Center, where she was responsible for cataloguing and preparing objects for the Unreserved Auctions. Prior to Rago, Anna worked as a registrar for Pace Gallery, in New York, and for The Newark Museum in Newark, NJ. Anna brings a breadth of experience and a collaborative vision to our organization. Christine Triantos joined the Advancement Department as Associate Director of Marketing & Communications in September 2015. Christine comes to us with more than twenty-five years of experience in communications, marketing and public relations, and has worked with organizations such as The Mount in Lenox, MA, and the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, among others. Christine and her family recently moved to Doylestown from the Boston area where she worked as a Marketing/ PR consultant and freelance writer for various non-profit organizations. Her efforts are focused on creating and sustaining a dynamic Michener brand and presence in the region and on a national level through editorial, partnerships, social media, and strategically placed advertising. Erika JaegerSmith has retired from her full-time responsibilities as Curatorial Program Manager and will continue to serve the Michener with project-based responsibilities. Erika began her association with the Michener Art Museum in 1994 as part of our front desk staff, a warm and welcome face and voice for our visitors. Over the years, she has held various positions in Curatorial, bringing exciting exhibitions and collections to our galleries and providing important infrastructure to our registrarial efforts. | New Staff Members 25 Audrey Long We are grateful to the many people who acknowledged the passing of loved ones and dear friends with a gift to the Michener Art Museum in their memory. William (Bill) Mandel, a long time Trustee and founder of the Janus/Mandel Society for art acquisitions; Audrey Long, dedicated patron, volunteer, and supporter of the Museum’s Corporate Business Partner program and exhibition, and a dynamic presence for our Art of Wine biennial fundraising event; and William John (Jack) Miller, who brought eager students and a joyous presence to our galleries on a regular basis, are remembered with generous donations. Gloria Dodd, CEO, Charter Management and Michener Corporate Business Partner, fondly remembers Audrey Long. “Audrey was a highly talented businesswoman/designer and a dear friend for more than 30 years. We shared a great affection for the Michener and the importance it brings to our community and Bucks County. To honor Audrey’s memory, it is my intention to invite and encourage more businesses to become part of the Michener experience as a Corporate Business Partner.” For more information: MichenerAr tMuseum.or g NEWS & NOTES | 26 Michener volunteers help make fans to decorate Kaffe Fassett tree: Maria Fell, Chris Auman, Alice Lawler, Cathy Perea, and Sharon McCall. Not pictured is Connie Kehs. Volunteers Those who can, do. Those who can do more, volunteer. A big THANK YOU to all Michener volunteers – the lifeline of the Museum. Volunteers are critical to the fulfillment of the Michener’s mission of preserving the cultural heritage of Bucks County and forging bonds between the Museum and the community. Our dedicated volunteers support the Michener staff in all areas of the Museum, including administrative offices, membership, security, education and curatorial departments, as well as the front desk and Museum Shop. Our volunteers have fun regardless of where they are – at the Museum or in the community. Their enthusiasm is contagious. Wouldn’t you like to join us? For more information about volunteering at the Michener, visit MichenerArtMuseum.org for a volunteer application. Sherry Tinsman Trunk Show Friday, April 29, 10–4 pm Saturday, April 30, 10–4 pm Sunday, May 1, 10–4 pm Museum Lobby No admission fee for Trunk Show Celebrate spring with a unique and stunning piece of jewelry from Bucks County designer Sherry Tinsman. Splurge on pieces made from sterling silver and 14k gold yellow or rose accents with occasional brass or copper highlights, and add a touch of whimsy with pearls or semi-precious stones. Meet Sherry and her staff, and treat yourself to a beautiful piece of wearable art. Teen Service Volunteers Make a Difference at the Michener! The Museum welcomes teen volunteers, too. This summer, the Museum was brimming with students making their mark on the Michener. Forty students volunteered as Counselors-in-Training (CIT) in our summer programs, assisting teachers with sculptures, murals, and comic books. They built imaginary lands, washed brushes, cut paper, displayed artwork, were excellent role models, and made friends. Working with the Education Department, the Art Audio Guide Team created an audio tour for younger audiences.. Teen service opportunities through the CIT program and Art Audio Guide Team will be available again in 2016. Read more on page 36 [Art classes section/Teen Service Opportunities section]. Connect with the Michener Enhance your experience at the Michener! In the galleries or online, there are many ways to connect. Q | Winter/Spr ing 2016 Visit MichenerArtMuseum.org to connect to Facebook, Twitter and other social media. Share your stories and comments. Use mobile apps to connect with the Michener. Or, visit the galleries to experience different ways to learn more about the collection and exhibitions. E D U C AT I O N Programs for School and Teachers Teacher Programs in Partnership with University of the Arts, The Professional Institute for Educators The Michener is proud to have a partnership with the Professional Institute for Educators (PIE) at the University of the Arts that provides continuing professional development for teachers. PIE empowers educators across disciplines to continually advance their teaching skills to improve learning for all students. Through graduate courses, PIE develops innovative and creative educational programming to serve the professional development needs of K-12 teachers in and through the arts. For more information, visit cs.uarts.edu/pie. Contact pie@uarts. edu or 215.717.6006 for further details. Visit MichenerArtMuseum.org for the latest offerings through UArts. Teachers are invited to participate in annual workshops at the Michener that coincide with exhibitions in collaboration with Bucks County Intermediate #22. These workshops are available for Continuing Professional Education credit under Act 48. For teacher workshops for the 2016 school year, visit MichenerArtMuseum.org. The Michener will also customize in-service programs to fit your needs at the Museum or at school. For more information on these programs, call 215.340.9800. School Outreach Programs For information on the following programs, contact Melissa at 215.340.9800 x124 or msandquist@michenerartmuseum.org If you are interested in having a Museum educator come to your classroom to teach about the arts in our region, we have various interdisciplinary outreach programs available for you and your students. Our special Traveling Trunk program includes authentic steamer trunks that focus on specific themes, including Pennsylvania Impressionism, Modernism, and George Nakashima, the internationally known woodworker. An outreach lesson can be customized to fit your curriculum. If you are looking for a lesson with a particular focus, the education staff can work with you in developing a program that meets your needs. Learning Resources for Your Classroom Download curriculum materials in conjunction with permanent collection works and special exhibitions by visiting the Classroom Connections pages—Learn with the Michener Art Museum at Learn. MichenerArtMuseum.org. Activities are available for before, during and after your school visit. All lessons and activities meet National, State and Common Core Standards in Education. For Preschools: Art’s First Steps Start a partnership with the Michener by collaborating with the Michener Art Museum Department of Youth and Family Programs. A Museum educator will visit your class to teach about works of art and engage students in the art making process. The class may also visit the Museum during the course of the school year. For K-12 Teachers: Arts Enrichment After School Expand the arts at your school by collaborating with the Michener Art Museum Department of Youth and Family Programs. For several years, enthusiastic teachers who support the arts have worked with the Michener Art Museum to develop unique after-school arts programs for their schools. The program may also incorporate a visit to the Museum during the course of the school year. | Teacher In-Service Workshops 27 Thank you Rose Group: Free Admission Program for Schools The James A. Michener Art Museum had another great year of free school visits thanks to the partnership with The Rose Group, a local franchisee of Applebee’s Grill & Bar and Corner Bakery Café. This year marked the eighth consecutive year to provide art enrichment to local students through the School Visit Program. The initiative offers free admission to all preschool through high school groups visiting the museum. To date, this program has served more than 38,500 students who benefited from educational opportunities at the Michener Art Museum. This partnership has helped the Michener attract a more diverse school audience from Bucks, Montgomery, Philadelphia, Lehigh, Delaware and Chester counties, as well as from New Jersey. After a museum visit, each student receives a free pass for a child’s return visit along with an Applebee’s coupon good for a free kid’s meal or $5 off an adult entrée. Be sure to make your reservation to secure your preferred date for your school visit. All students and teachers from preschool through high school are admitted free. Gallery lessons at the Michener are tailored to fit various age groups and school curricula. Lessons meet State standards and Common Core Standards in education, and connect to multiple subject areas. Education staff can customize gallery lessons to meet teachers’ curricular needs. Reservations for a school visit are made by contacting Melissa Sandquist at 215.340.9800 x124 or msandquist@ michenerartmuseum.org. Teachers are encouraged to contact the Museum at least three weeks in advance. Reservations are accepted on a first-come, first served basis. Tours are offered beginning at 9 am. Only pre-booked docent-led or self-guided groups are included in the free admission program. Chaperones in the allotted 1-to-6 ratio are free; please call for information on any related admission costs for programs and additional chaperones. More information about school tours and teacher programs is available at learn.MichenerArtMuseum.org and MichenerArtMuseum.org/teachers/. Camp Capers Summer Camp directors are invited to call and schedule a two-hour individualized program for campers of all ages, incorporating a guided tour of the galleries and a hands-on studio art experience. Each camper will create an original work of art inspired by our collection. For information about Art’s First Steps, Arts Enrichment After School Program, or Camp Capers, contact 215.340.9800 x126 or randerson@michenerartmuseum.org. MichenerAr tMuseum.or g ART CLASSES Preschool through Adult WINTER AND SPRING ART CLASSES THERE IS ALWAYS MORE AT THE MICHENER Individualized attention, small classes, frequent gallery tours, and master teachers are hallmarks of exceptional programs that combine the development of new skills with personal expression and exposure to a variety of arts media. Student work will be exhibited in the Education Gallery throughout the year. Go to MichenerArtMuseum.org for the latest in art class offerings. | Art at the Heart of Education 28 Art classes at the Michener inspire learners of all ages to create original works of art in a variety of studio and gallery programs. REGISTRATION INFORMATION Advance registration is required 215.340.9800 x105 MichenerArtMuseum.org • Course information: 215.340.9800 x126 or randerson@michenerartmuseum.org • Register early, class size is limited. Classes must reach enrollment requirements. • Art materials are included unless otherwise noted. • There is a 25% cancellation fee for programs and no refund once the program begins. MICHENER ART MUSEUM IS PROUD TO ANNOUNCE OUR AWARD-WINNING INSTRUCTORS: Cara Alderfer Ruth Anderson Erin Casey Linsey Griffin Jody Holbert Katie Knoeringer Robin Lane Megan Miller Janet Ogelby Stephani Thomas Andrea Thompson Maria Wible SCHOLARSHIPS ARE AVAILABLE FOR ALL CLASSES (and include a one-year family membership) The Robert V. Nesi Education Award The Holly Berry Huynh Memorial Scholarship The Volunteer Scholarship for Art Education Application forms are available at MichenerArtMuseum.org 215.340.9800 x126 or randerson@michenerartmuseum.org for more information. Q | Winter/Spr ing 2016 WEEKDAYS Ages 3-6 w/one adult LEARNING TO LOOK AND LISTEN Winter: Tuesdays, January 19–March 15 10-11 am or 1-2 pm (W1500-16) Thursdays, January 21–March 17 10-11 am or 1-2 pm (W1501-16) Spring: Tuesdays, March 29–May 17 10-11 am or 1-2 pm (S1500-16) Thursdays, March 31–May 19 10-11 am or 1-2 pm (S1501-16) Child w/one adult: $125 member/ $135 non-member (additional adults are required to pay program participation fee) Instructor: Ruth Anderson Students join an adult caregiver in this popular intergenerational program with gallery lessons and art activities that inspire verbal development, visual awareness, dynamic conversation, imagination, creativity, and selfexpression. Projects are not repeated in Learning to Look and Listen sessions. Many families attend the entire year, and many return for several consecutive years. Specify day of the week and time when registering. Just for Kindergartners NEW! KINDERGARTEN CREATES Winter: Wednesdays, January 20–March 16 10-11:30 am or 1-2:30 pm (W1502-16) Spring: Wednesdays, March 30–May 18 10-11:30 am or 1-2:30 pm (S1502-16) $135 member/$150 non-member Instructor: Andrea Thompson Kindergarten students are invited to enjoy a morning or afternoon art class, with gallery lessons and art-making experiences that are certain to educate, excite, and inspire. Students will draw, paint, sculpt, print, work with mixed media, and explore the Michener exhibitions. Kindergarten Creates is designed to be a full-year program; projects will not be repeated during the year. Specify time when registering. WEEKENDS Grades 1-4 DISCOVER ART: Painting, Printmaking, Photos and Collage (W1503-16) Saturdays, January 23–March 19 10 am-noon or 1-3 pm $175 member/$190 non-member Instructor: Andrea Thompson (am), Stephanie Thomas (pm) Combine skills in drawing and painting with new discoveries in a variety of arts media and arts processes – monoprints, linocuts, photography, papers, fabrics, metal, and more. Students work with Michener exhibitions, original photographs, real life and imagination in classes designed to enhance drawing and painting skills, inspire the creation of unique works of art, and provide opportunities to work with a variety of 2D art materials. Specify time when registering. Grades 1-4 DISCOVER ART: Drawing, Painting and Sculpture (S1503-16) Saturdays, April 2–May 21 10 am-noon or 1-3 pm $175 member/$190 non-member Instructors: Andrea Thompson (am), Stephanie Thomas (pm) Students will combine skills in drawing and painting with new discoveries in sculpture. Students will be inspired by Museum exhibitions and artists around the world while working with pencil, pastels, watercolors, acrylics, clay, wood, wire, plaster, and more. Realism and imagination will inspire the creation of unique works of art, and provide opportunities to work with a variety of 2D and 3D art materials. Specify time when registering. Grades 4-7 EXPLORE ART: More Drawing and Painting (S1504-16) Saturdays, April 2–May 21 10 am-noon or 1-3 pm $175 member/$190 non-member Instructor: Maria Wible Students will develop and expand their fine arts skills including observation, composition, personal expression, imagination, and the use of detail, shading, texture, perspective, and color. Working with the Museum collections and observation from real life, students will explore graphite, pastels, watercolors, and acrylics on canvas. Students will add some layered mixed media and collage materials to their works this season. They will also work out of doors at easels when weather permits. Specify time when registering. $175 member/$190 non-member Instructor: Robin Lane Paint with watercolors and acrylics, use original photographs, and learn to create images in multiples with linocuts, silkscreen prints, and more. Incorporate tours through Michener galleries with individualized instruction, observation from real life, photographs, and imagination in classes designed to foster self-expression and the development of a personal style. Bring a cell phone to this class, if you have one! Grades 7-9 ASPIRING ARTISTS: Working in 2 & 3 Dimensions (S1505-16) Saturdays, April 2–May 21, 1-3 pm $175 member/$190 non-member Instructor: Robin Lane Students will develop and expand their fine arts skills including observation, composition, personal expression, imagination, and the use of detail, shading, texture, perspective, and color in this class. Students will be inspired by Museum exhibitions and artists around the world while working with pencil, pastels, watercolors, acrylics, clay, wood, wire, plaster, and more. For program registration and information: MichenerAr tMuseum.or g ART CLASSES Grades 7-9 ASPIRING ARTISTS: Painting, Prints and Photos (W1505-16) Saturdays, January 23–March 19 1-3 pm | Grades 4-7 EXPLORE ART: Painting and Printmaking (W1504-16) Saturdays, January 23–March 19 10 am-noon or 1-3 pm $175 member/$190 non-member Instructors: Erin Casey (am), Katie Knoeringer (pm) Learn to create images using drawings, paintings, and photographs as inspiration while learning a variety of painting and printmaking processes. Students will use acrylics, watercolors, and inks on a variety of papers, cloth, and canvas. They will also learn how to create linocuts and silkscreen prints. Specify time when registering. 29 Grades 9-12 HIGH SCHOOL ARTISTS: Painting (W1506-16) Saturdays, January 23– March 19, 9 am-noon $185 member/ $200 non-member Instructor: Katie Knoeringer Students will take a fresh approach to painting where observation, demonstrations, individualized instruction, and group critiques are at the core of every work of art. They will work with acrylic and watercolor paint to create realistic paintings based on observation from real life. They will also explore basic concepts of abstraction in a few of their artworks. They will focus on color mixing, shading with color, texture, observation, and detail. All students will learn techniques and develop skills that are at the cornerstone of creative growth in the arts. They will also find new ways to enjoy the creative process while creating a variety of finished paintings. Students will also visit the Museum galleries weekly, studying the techniques, images, and ideas of practicing and historical artists whose work is in our collections. They will learn to create a master copy based on one of the works in the collection. Grades 9-12 HIGH SCHOOL ARTISTS: Drawing in Color (S1506-16) Saturdays, April 2–May 21, 9 am-noon $185 member/$200 non-member Instructor: Katie Knoeringer Students will take a fresh approach to their artwork in this class where observation, demonstrations, individualized instruction, and group Q | Winter/Spr ing 2016 FAMILY WEEKEND PROGRAMS Ages 6 and older FAMILY DRAWING DAYS Sundays, 1-3 pm January 10 (J1507-16) February 7 (F1507-16) March 6 (MR1507-16) April 3 (A1507-16) May 1 (MA1507-16) $8 member/$10 non-member Instructor: Robin Lane Parents and caregivers will draw in the galleries and the art studio with their children using a variety of art materials. No experience is necessary; adults accompanying children also pay the program fee. Preregistration required. critiques are at the core of every drawing. They will work with materials including pencil, colored pencil, pastel, and watercolor to create realistic drawings based on observation from real life. They will also learn to incorporate unique materials including beet juice, walnut ink, coffee, tea, and masking tape to create less conventional realistic drawings. All students will learn techniques and develop skills that are at the cornerstone of creative growth in the arts. They will also find new ways to enjoy the creative process while creating a variety of finished drawings that incorporate the use of color. Students will also visit the Museum galleries weekly, studying the techniques, images, and ideas of practicing and historical artists whose work is in our collections. They will learn to create a master copy based on one of the works in the collection. All Ages MARTIN LUTHER KING DAY OF SERVICE AND ART (MLK1407) Sunday, January 17, 1-3 pm Free; Preregistration required. Instructor: Phyllis Eckelmeyer, Ruth Anderson and guests Celebrate Dr. Martin Luther King’s commitment to the world community with your friends and family. Learn about the Maasai people living in Kenya – their lifestyle, their culture, their schools, Maasai woman Meeyu Sale wearing her finest. their art, and their music. Learn how the Maasai, living in a harsh environment, dig wells and plant gardens. Create a work of art and write a letter to a Maasai pen pal. Scout groups may also want to register for this event. PHOTO: JACK-Z ART CLASSES | 30 WINTER AND SPRING ART CLASSES continued SEWING CLASSES These three-day workshops will provide unique opportunities for beginning and intermediate sewers to create handmade artworks combining ready-made patterns with original designs. Participants may create multiple projects in each session. Some sewing machines are available; some participants may prefer to bring their own machine. Students will be inspired by the special exhibition Blanket Statements: New Quilts by Kaffe Fassett and Historical Quilts from the Quilt Museum and Gallery, York, UK. Grades 4 and up Sewing Pillows (J1510-15) Sundays, January 24, 31, February 7, 1-3 pm $55 member/$70 non-member Instructor: Andrea Thompson Learn to sew a basic pillow and embellish it with applique, buttons, beads, ribbons and more! Keep the pillow for yourself, or give it away as a gift. Adults are welcome to join their children or grandchildren for this workshop; all participants pay the program fee. Grades 4 and up Sewing Tote Bags (F1510-16) Sundays, February 14, 21 & 28, 1-3 pm $55 member/$70 non-member Instructor: Andrea Thompson Learn to sew a tote bag based on a simple design, and decorate it to make it an original work of art! Adults are welcome to join their children or grandchildren for this workshop; all participants pay the program fee. HOMESCHOOLER ART CLASSES Month-long sessions with changing themes provide a unique focus for students to engage in museumbased art education, creative exploration, discovery, and learning. Permanent collections balanced with changing exhibitions provide ongoing opportunities for looking at and learning about a variety of art forms in new ways. Individualized attention, small classes, frequent gallery tours, and a master teacher are hallmarks of exceptional programs that combine the development of new skills with personal expression and exposure to a variety of 2D and 3D arts media. As always, students will work in an environment rooted in inspired and supportive instruction, meaningful gallery experiences, and personal observation and imagination. Design and Pattern Ages 5-10 (WY16-1) Tuesdays, January 19–February 9, 1-3 pm Ages 10-14 (WY16-2) Thursdays, January 21–February 11, 1-3 pm $80 member/$88 non-member Instructor: Andrea Thompson Students will create two and three-dimensional works of art while discovering all the possibilities of design and pattern in art. They will explore mixed media, incorporating collage materials, photography, oil pastels, printmaking, and paint in their two dimensional works. They will use wood and wire while exploring pattern in three dimensions. Curriculum differs for each age group; choose day and appropriate age group when registering. Special Exhibition Focus: Blanket Statements: New Quilts by Kaffe Fassett and Historical Quilts from the Collection of the Quilt Museum and Gallery, York, UK and Pattern Pieces: Can You Make a Quilt out of Wood? Realism and Imagination Ages 5-10 (WY16-3) Tuesdays, February 16–March 8, 1-3 pm Ages 10-14 (WY16-4) Thursdays, February 18–March 10, 1-3 pm $80 member/$88 non-member Faculty: Andrea Thompson Students will explore the use of shading, perspective, line, color, texture, and detail in their drawings and paintings. They will learn to apply new skills while creating both realistic and imaginary images. Pencil, charcoal, pastel, acrylics, and ink will be explored in this class. Curriculum differs for each age group; choose day and appropriate age group when registering. Special Exhibition Focus: Linden Frederick: Roadside Tales. More Drawing and Painting Ages 5-10 (SY16-5) Tuesdays, March 15–April 5, 1-3 pm Ages 10-14 (SY16-6) Thursdays, March 17–April 7, 1-3 pm $80 member/$88 non-member Faculty: Andrea Thompson Students will work with Michener exhibitions, photographs, real life, and imagination in classes designed to enhance drawing and painting skills, inspire the creation of unique works of art, and provide opportunities to work with a variety of 2D art materials including pencils, pastels, ink, watercolors, and acrylics on a variety of surfaces. Students who took Drawing and Painting in November will get an entirely new experience in this class, and have the opportunity to build on what they learned previously; projects are not repeated in any of our sessions. Curriculum differs for each age group; choose day and appropriate age group when registering. Special Exhibition Focus: Permanent Collection - Realism at Mid-Century. For program registration and information: MichenerAr tMuseum.or g ART CLASSES ART CLASSES FOR UNIQUE AUDIENCES! | new! 31 ART CLASSES | 32 new! ART CLASSES FOR UNIQUE AUDIENCES! continued Make it Modern Ages 5-10 (SY16-7) Tuesdays, April 12–May 3, 1-3 pm Ages 10-14 (SY16-8) Thursdays, April 14–May 5, 1-3 pm $80 member/$88 non-member Faculty: Andrea Thompson Students learn how modern and contemporary artists view and interpret the world through their works of art. They learn how objects and events in modern life can be inspiration for explorations in color, line, form, and abstraction. Students also learn how to use their own life stories as subject matter for artworks while developing new skills in drawing, painting, and printmaking. Curriculum differs for each age group; choose day and appropriate age group when registering. Special Exhibition Focus: Permanent Collection – Modern and Contemporary Art. Sculpture Ages 5-10 (SY16-9) Tuesdays, May 10–24, 1-3 pm Ages 10-14 (SY16-10) Thursdays, May 12–26, 1-3 pm $66 member/$72 non-member Faculty: Andrea Thompson Students will explore the art of sculpture while working on a variety of creations of their own, using assemblage, additive and subtractive methods, and a variety of unique 3-D materials. They will work with clay, wire, wood, plaster, and found and natural objects to create realistic and abstract three-dimensional art. Curriculum differs for each age group; choose day and appropriate age group when registering. Special Exhibition Focus: Patricia D. Pfundt Sculpture Garden. ADULT ART CLASSES (All ages and abilities) Join our series of informal, informative, and inspiring handson art classes. Month-long sessions with changing themes provide a unique focus to engage in Museum-based art education, creative exploration and learning. Permanent collections balanced with changing exhibitions provide ongoing opportunities for looking at and learning about a variety of art forms. Individualized attention, small classes, frequent gallery tours, and a master teacher are hallmarks of exceptional programs that combine the development of new skills with personal expression and exposure to a variety art material. Adults Introduction to Color (WY16-21) Wednesdays, January 20–February 10, 10 am-1 pm $120 member/$132 non-member Instructor: Jody Holbert This class will teach how to use color effectively in a painting. Understanding how color works is the core of creating drawings, paintings, and works in other media. Students will Q | Winter/Spr ing 2016 engage in a variety of exercises to explore and experiment with color, develop an understanding of the relationship of colors in a work of art, and be introduced to color theory. Participants will created a finished still life painting using acrylic paint on canvas. Special Exhibition Focus: Blanket Statements: New Quilts by Kaffe Fassett and Historical Quilts from the Collection of the Quilt Museum and Gallery, York, UK. Adults Drawing with Color (WY16-22) Wednesdays, February 17–March 9, 10 am-1 pm $120 member/$132 non-member Instructor: Jody Holbert Students will incorporate color into drawings while working with a variety of materials including charcoal, oil and chalk pastels, pencil, colored pencil, and graphic markers. Inspired by the realism of Linden Frederick, they will learn to incorporate new techniques and materials into works of art that express personal spirit and style. Special Exhibition Focus: Linden Frederick: Roadside Tales. Adults Using Mixed Media: Realism and Abstraction (SY16-24) Wednesdays, April 13–May 4, 10 am-1 pm $120 member/$132 non-member Instructor: Jody Holbert A perfect opportunity to “break out of the box” while combining drawing, painting, printmaking, and collage to create realistic and abstract works of art. Guided instruction and new discoveries will inspire work in a variety of arts media and processes including monoprints, linocuts, found photography, papers, fabrics and more. Special Exhibition Focus: Permanent Collection—Modern and Contemporary Art. Adults Working with Landscape (SY16-25) Wednesdays, May 11–25, 10 am-1 pm $90 member/$99 non-member Instructor: Jody Holbert The Michener prides itself in its collection of Pennsylvania Impressionist landscape paintings created by master artists including Daniel Garber, Fern Coppedge and Edward Redfield. Participants will learn how these artists used light, atmospheric perspective, color, texture, detail, and composition to depict the local landscape. The class offers guided instruction while sketching in the galleries, working in the studio and en plein air (weather permitting). Students will create a series of landscapes using graphite, pastels, acrylic and watercolor paint. Special Exhibition Focus: Patricia D. Pfundt Sculpture Garden and the Labyrinth. Ladies Night Out March and May programs – see page 36. ART CLASSES | Adults Introduction to Painting: Acrylics and Watercolors (SY16-23) Wednesdays, March 16–April 6, 10 am-1 pm $120 member/$132 non-member Instructor: Jody Holbert The perfect opportunity to develop or refresh skills and become comfortable with completing a painting. Participants will learn a variety of techniques and explore the possibilities of watercolor and acrylic paints while learning techniques including wet-on-wet, scumbling, dry brush, wash, and glazing. After exploration with color, brushwork and composition, they will complete a painting in the medium of their choice. Special Exhibition Focus: Permanent Collection—Realism at Mid-Century. 33 summer art classes Join us for an extensive exploration of the arts in our summer programs for students age 5 through grade 12. Complete course descriptions are available at MichenerArtMuseum.org and in our summer program flyer. Contact us for details at 215.340.9800 x126 or randerson@michenerartmuseum.org. Lunch option: Bring lunch and combine morning and afternoon programs during several weeks as noted. CITs and college interns will supervise students while teachers prepare for afternoon classes. JUNE 27–JULY 1 Lunch Option 1 (L1:27-1) available this week – $35 Grades 1-4 Beginning Fabric Design (SC16-1) 9 am-noon $175 member/$190 non-member Instructor: Stephani Thomas Grades 1-4 Jewelry Making (SC16-2) 1-4 pm $175 member/$190 non-member Instructor: Stephani Thomas Grades 1-4 Comic Book Extravaganza (SC16-3) 1-4 pm $160 member/$175 non-member Instructor: Andrea Thompson Grades 5-8 Comic Books, Sci-Fi and Fantasy (SC16-4) 9 am-noon $160 member/$175 non-member Instructor: Andrea Thompson Grades 5-9 Fabric Design and Sewing 1 (SC16-5) 10 am-4 pm $225 member/$240 non-member Instructor: Erin Casey MichenerAr tMuseum.or g 4 JULY 5-8 Note: This is a four-day week. Lunch Option 2 (L2:5-8) available this week – $30 | ART CLASSES SUMMER ART CLASSES continued 34 Age 6 New! Sensational Sixes (SC16-6) 9 am-noon or 1-4 pm $130 member/$145 non-member Instructor: Megan Miller Choose time when registering. Grades 1-4 Positively Perfect! Paint, Prints, Paper and Plaster (SC16-7) 9 am-noon $130 member/$145 non-member Instructor: Maria Wible JULY 11-15 JULY 18-22 Lunch Option 3 (L3:11-15) available this week – $35 Lunch Option 4 (L4:18-22) available this week – $35 Grades 1-6 All About Art: Planes, Trains and Automobiles (SC16-10) 8:30 am-4:30 pm $300 member/$325 non-member Instructors: Robin Lane and Megan Miller Grades 1-6 Kids Around the World: Art, Music and Theater (SC16-13) 8:30 am-5 pm $400 member/$425 non-member Instructors: Stephani Thomas and Linsey Griffin This is a two-week program from July 18-29. Grades 5-8 Animals, Imaginary Beings and People (SC16-11) 9 am-noon $160 member/$175 non-member Instructor: Andrea Thompson Grades 1-4 Exploring Canvas (SC16-8) 1-4 pm $130 member/$145 non-member Instructor: Maria Wible Grades 5-8 Stained Glass (SC16-9) 10 am-4 pm $225 member/$240 non-member Instructors: Erin Casey and Andrea Thompson Fees include all tools and materials needed for the creation of two completed stained glass works. Q | Winter/Spr ing 2016 Grades 5-8 Black and White (SC16-12) 1-4 pm $160 member/$175 non-member Instructor: Andrea Thompson Grades 6-9 Creative Writing for Teens Using the Visual Arts (M-CWA) 1-4 pm This course is offered in collaboration with the Pennsylvania Writing and Literacy Project. Register online at pawlp.org or call 610.436.3089; please do not contact the Museum to register. Grades 1-4 Nature! Draw, Paint, Print and Sculpt (SC16-14) 9 am-noon $160 member/$175 non-member Instructor: Maria Wible Grades 1-4 Drawing for Kids (SC16-15) 1-4 pm $160 member/$175 non-member Instructor: Cara Alderfer Grades 5-8 Drawing (SC16-16) 9 am-noon $160 member/$175 non-member Instructor: Cara Alderfer Grades 5-8 The Art of Nature: Painting, Printmaking and Sculpture (SC16-17) 1-4 pm $160 member/$175 non-member Instructor: Maria Wible AUGUST 1-5 AUGUST 15-19 Lunch Option 5 (L5:1-5) available this week – $35 Lunch Option 7 (L7:15-19) available this week – $35 Grades 1-6 All About Art: Imagine This! (SC16-30) 8:30 am-4:30 pm $300 member/$325 non-member Instructors: Robin Lane and Megan Miller Grades 5-8 Advanced Anime (SC16-31) 9 am-noon $160 member/$175 non-member Instructor: Andrea Thompson Grades 1-4 Sculpture 1 (SC16-22) 9 am-noon $175 member/$190 non-member Instructor: Robin Lane Grades 5-12 Art Audio Guide Team (SC16-18) Monday through Thursday, 1-4 pm Friday, 10 am-4 pm $160 member/$175 non-member Instructors: Ruth Anderson, Adrienne Romano and Andrea Thompson Students attending the morning drawing class will meet with the Audio Team at noon on Friday. Students who attended this class in 2015 are welcome to return this summer. JULY 25-29 No lunch option available this week. Age 5 Fabulous Fives (SC16-19) 9 am-noon or 1-4 pm $160 member/$175 non-member Instructor: Megan Miller Choose time when registering. Grades 1-4 New! Magical Mosaics (SC16-20) 1-4 pm $175 member/$190 non-member Instructor: Robin Lane Grades 1-6 Kids Around the World: Art, Music and Theater (SC16-13) 8:30 am-5 pm $400 member/$425 non-member Instructors: Stephani Thomas and Linsey Griffin This is a two-week program from July 18-29. Grades 1-4 Drawing and Painting 1 (SC16-23) 1-4 pm $160 member/$175 non-member Instructor: Megan Miller Grades 5-8 Drawing and Painting 2 (SC16-24) 9 am-noon $160 member/$175 non-member Instructor: Megan Miller Grades 5-8 Sculpture 2 (SC16-25) 1-4 pm $175 member/$190 non-member Instructor: Robin Lane Grades 5-8 Optical Illusions (SC16-32) 1-4 pm $160 member/$175 non-member Instructor: Andrea Thompson Grades 6-12 Fabric Design and Sewing 2 (SC16-26) 10 am-4 pm $225 member/$240 non-member Instructor: Erin Casey and Andrea Thompson AUGUST 8-12 Lunch Option 6 (L6:8-12) available this week – $35 Grades 1-6 All About Art: Let’s Go to the Movies (SC16-27) 8:30 am-4:30 pm $300 member/$325 non-member Instructors: Robin Lane and Megan Miller Grades 5-8 Beginning Anime (SC16-28) 9 am-noon $160 member/$175 non-member Instructor: Andrea Thompson For program registration and information: MichenerAr tMuseum.or g ART CLASSES Grades 5-8 Working on Canvas (SC16-29) 1-4 pm $160 member/$175 non-member Instructor: Andrea Thompson | Grades 5-8 New! Making Mosaics (SC16-21) 9 am-noon $175 member/$190 non-member Instructor: Robin Lane 35 COMMUNITY PROGRAMS | 36 community Programs Call 215.340.9800 x126 or randerson@michenerartmuseum.org for details. LADIES OUT! Women of all ages are welcome to attend these unique workshops, appropriate for beginners and experienced artists. Self-expression, experimentation, and all-out fun are the focus. Refreshments will be served. Sponsored by Penn Management at Morgan Stanley. Sisters and Goddesses (W1508-16) Friday March 11, 6:30-9:30 pm, $35 member/$42 non-member Inspiration for a female portrait mixed media on canvas piece comes from the Holly Trostle Brigham: Sisters and Goddesses exhibition. Please bring a color or black and white photograph of a woman who means a lot to you to this workshop. Altered Shirts (S1508-16) Bring Your Mom – Or Not! Friday May 6, 6:30-9:30 pm $35 member/$42 non-member Sew, print, cut, knot, stamp, applique, stitch, or bead your t-shirt to create a one-of-akind article of clothing that expresses yourself and gleans inspiration from the special exhibition Philadelphia in Style: A Century of Fashion. Please bring a t-shirt to this workshop - any size, any color! TEEN SERVICE OPPORTUNITIES Add community service experience to your National Junior Honor Society, National Honor Society, and college applications. Go to MichenerArtMuseum.org for detailed information. Grades 5-12 Art Audio Guide Team (SC16-18) Monday through Thursday, 1-4 pm Friday, 10 am-4 pm $160 member/$175 non-member Instructors: Ruth Anderson, Adrienne Romano and Andrea Thompson Grades 9-12 Counselors In Training We are seeking creative and responsible volunteers in grades 9 through 12 to become Counselors-in-Training (CITs) at the Michener Art Museum’s summer camps in 2016. CITs will work with Michener summer camp staff and gain valuable experience working with children in preschool through grade 8 in an arts classroom setting. Applications are available at MichenerArtMuseum.org, or by contacting Ruth Anderson at 215.340.9800 x126 or randerson@michenerartmuseum.org. STUDENT EXHIBITIONS JUST FOR SCOUTS (all ages) $12 per Scout includes Museum admission and materials; $15 per Scout includes admission, materials, and a Michener Scout Arts Patch. Siblings welcome to participate in the workshop for the same fee. One chaperone for every six students is admitted free; all other chaperones pay $12. For information or to schedule an individualized program, call 215.340.9800 x126 or e-mail randerson@michenerartmuseum.org. Explore the Prison Sunday February 7, 1-3 pm Instructor: Ruth Anderson and Guests All About Paint Sunday April 24, 1-3 pm Instructor: Andrea Thompson and Guests Boy and Girl Scouts are invited to explore the Michener Museum’s prison history. Find traces of prison life in the Museum galleries, hear stories about the prison, and complete a drawing based on an image of the Bucks County Prison, built in 1884. This is a rare behind-the-scenes view of the Michener. Registration is limited; event must book prior to January 25. Boy and Girl Scouts are invited to learn about color and paint while creating a completed landscape painting. Registration is limited; Scout leaders must book this event prior to April 13. Q | Winter/Spr ing 2016 Sensational Summers for Scouts Instructor: Michener Art Museum Faculty Scout leaders can call 215.340.9800 x126 to schedule. Rising Artists March 12 – March 31 Art in Bloom April 10 – May 8 Ann and Herman Silverman Education Pavilion Celebrate the accomplishments of over 200 student artists in two exhibitions of artwork created throughout the year in our weekday, weekend, and offsite programs. Paintings, prints, drawings, sculptures, mosaics, and mixed-media works inspired by Michener collections will fill our Education Center. Free public receptions: March 12, noon–4 pm; April 10, 2–4 pm. Education Gallery exhibitions and events are sponsored by: Lead Sponsor: Penn Community Bank Sponsors: FACT Bucks County, Morrie Breyer & Michael Mamp GET TO KNOW US Contact Us Herman Silverman, Chairman Emeritus Louis E. Della Penna, Chairman Gregory Church, President Bonnie O’Boyle, Vice President Frederick E. Schea, Treasurer Virginia Sigety, Secretary William S. Aichele Dana Applestein Lizanne Bernlohr Robert Byers Barbara Donnelly Bentivoglio Edward Fernberger, Jr. Charles Gale Frank Gallagher Elizabeth Beans Gilbert Gregory Grim, Esq. Mary C. Helf, Esq. Jane Jozoff Bruce Norman Long Sydney F. Martin Kevin S. Putman Barbara Rabson Tom Scannapieco Christine Taylor Michael A. Tomeo, M.D. Robert J. Welch Director’s Office Lisa Tremper Hanover Rebecca Rosen Director & CEO x114 Executive Assistant x128 Advancement Laurie McGahey Molly Dougherty Jennifer Fekete-Donners Senior Director of Advancement x161 Associate Director of Advancement x120 Advancement Operations Administrator x148 Archives & Library Pamela Sergey Birgitta Bond Archivist & Volunteer Manager x117 Librarian & Artists’ Database Manager x150 Trustees Emeriti William Brenner William H. Mandel* Mira Nakashima-Yarnall G. Nelson Pfundt Albert W. Pritchard, Jr. *deceased County Board of Commissioners: Robert G. Loughery, Chair Charles M. Martin, Vice-Chair Diane M. Ellis-Marseglia The Michener Art Museum, an independent, non-profit cultural institution, receives annual support from Bucks County and our elected Commissioners. Exhibitions & Collections Kirsten M. Jensen Louise Feder Anna Kelly Kelsey Halliday Johnson Gerry & Marguerite Lenfest Chief Curator x125 Assistant Curator x116 Registrar x146 Curatorial Fellow in Photography and New Media x162 Education & Public Programs Zoriana Siokalo Ruth Anderson Erin Collins Andrea Thompson Senior Director of Programs x122 Director of Arts Education x126 Data Administrator x105 Arts Education Coordinator x115 Finance Dar Landes Gina Wydner Chief Financial Officer x137 Bookkeeper x112 Group Tours Melissa Easton-Sandquist Community Programs & Group Visits Manager x124 Interpretation & Innovation Adrienne Neszmelyi-Romano Director of Interpretation & Innovation x111 Marketing, Public Relations & Communications Christine Hensel Triantos Associate Director, Marketing and Communications x133 Antoinette S. Maciolek Marketing Production Manager x113 Membership Brianna Meisenbacher Membership & Special Events Coordinator x110 Visitor Services, Facility Rental & Museum Shop Hollie Brown Director of Operations x151 For program registration and information: MichenerAr tMuseum.or g | 2016 Board of Trustees 3737 CALENDAR JANUARY Summer Camp Spectacular Discover a world of inspiration and creativity at the Michener Museum’s summer art camps! Students can draw, paint, sculpt, make comic books, design jewelry, create mosaics, sew, work with stained glass, learn anime, sing, dance, act, or create an audio guide. High school students can also enjoy community service opportunities through our CIT program. Scholarships are available for all summer programs. First and Third Sundays of the Month OMEI Observe, Meditate, Experience, Internalize / P. 15 January 13, 27 English Paper Piecing / P. 9 | January 19 & 26 Gallery Talk Bring Your Own Blanket (BYOB) / P. 10 38 January 21 New Members Reception / P. 21 FEBRUARY February 3, 17 English Paper Piecing / P. 9 February 20 Exhibition Opens Holly Trostle Brigham: Sisters and Goddesses / P. 7 February 21 Sunday Afternoon Concert / P. 17 February 27 Jazz Night / P. 16 MARCH March 13 Exhibition Opens Philadelphia in Style: A Century of Fashion from The Robert and Penny Fox Historic Costume Collection, Drexel University / P. 3 March 23 Artist Conversation Hollie Trostle Brigham and Leo Mazow, Ph.D. / P. 7 March 26 Exhibition Opens Katharine Steel Renninger: Craft, Commitment, Community / P. 8 March 29 Curator’s Gallery Talk Katharine Steel Renninger / P. 8 Summer art classes begin June 27 and run through August 19. APRIL M AY April 3 Lecture in Song Lovely to Look At: Fashion, Style and Glamour in American Popular Song / P. 5 May 1 Sherry Tinsman Trunk Show / P. 26 April 5 Lecture The Century of the Designer / P. 4 April 7 Fashion Film Series Unzipped / P. 6 April 8 Fashion Tour Textile and Costume Collection, Philadelphia University / P. 5 April 12 Lecture The Woman of Fashion / P. 4 April 15 Studio Tour Alan Goldstein / P. 10 April 19 Fashion Tour The Robert and Penny Fox Historic Costume Collection, Drexel University / P. 5 April 21 Fashion Film Series The September Issue / P. 6 April 29, 30 Sherry Tinsman Trunk Show / P. 26 The museum is open on select evenings for programs, events or lectures. Please visit MichenerArtMuseum.org or call 215.340.9800 for more information or to confirm dates and times. Programs are subject to change. Q | Winter/Spr ing 2016 May 4 Curator’s Gallery Talk Katharine Steele Renninger: Craft, Commitment, Community / P. 8 May 12 Lecture Undressing in Style: A Century of Underwear / P. 4 May 14 Studio Tour Nakashima Studio / P. 14 May 21 Jazz Night / P. 16 JUNE June 2 Fashion Film Series Scatter My Ashes at Bergdorf’s / P. 6 June 3 Studio Tour Steve Tobin / P. 15 June 10 Studio Tour Ben Solowey / P. 14 June 16 Fashion Film Series IRIS / P. 6 June 17 Fashion Tour Costume and Textiles, Philadelphia Museum of Art / P. 5 Benefits include: Individual: $50 • Free admission to the galleries including ticketed exhibitions • Invitations to exclusive members-only receptions • 10% discount on purchases at the Museum Shop • 10% discount in the Museum Café • One free guest pass • Discount on museum-sponsored adult programs • Free subscription to Q: The Magazine of the Michener Art Museum Dual: $70 All the above benefits for two adults plus: As a sculptor, Kralik’s interest in the Michener comes from a long-time love for the arts. In addition to being a dedicated member for 15 years, his work is in the Museum’s permanent collection. What is your favorite part of being a member at the Michener? The changing exhibitions offer members like me more reasons to come back often. I like seeing works from the permanent collection. You don’t really see paintings displayed salon style anymore. E X H I B I T I O N SM/ EP M RO BG E RRSAHMI PS Become a Member Today! Meet Milan J. Kralik, Jr., known to friends as “Skip,” who kindly spoke with us on a recent visit to the Michener. We talked about his history with the Museum inside the lovely Byers Gallery, which recently underwent dramatic changes to allow for more masterpieces from the permanent collection to be on view. | Member Profile 39 What is your favorite piece of artwork at the Museum and why? I am drawn to the work of Mira Nakashima, the daughter of the late American artist and architect George Nakashima, who has carried on the family tradition. The piece Simon Table [designed for Professor Lee Simon in 1992] speaks to me. • One additional free guest pass (total of 2) Household: $80 The yarnbombing of Steve Tobin’s sculpture Dancing Steelroots was completed by artist ishknits, who famously yarnbombed the Rocky statue on the steps of the Philadelphia Museum of Art with a pink sweater that asked viewers to “GO SEE THE ART.” Considered the softer side of Street Art, yarnbombing brings creativity and humor to an accessible public act that promotes the elevation of craft mediums to the fine arts. All the above benefits for two adults and children under the age of 18 at the same address or up to two grandparents and all associated grandchildren under 18 plus: • Two additional free guest passes (total of 4) • Discount on art classes and programs Contributor: $100 All the above benefits plus: • Reciprocal memberships with 600+ North American museums In-kind support for the installation on Pine Street was generously provided by Red Heart Yarn, a Coats brand. Sustaining: $250 All the above benefits plus: • An additional two free guest passes (total of 6) • 15% discount at the Museum Shop • 5% discount on facility rentals • Invitation to an exhibition sponsor/ artist reception Member Receptions Patron: $500 • • • • Complimentary exhibition catalogue Admission for (4) adults each visit 10% discount on facility rentals Free docent-led tour for 15 people (advance reservations required) Michener Circle: $1,000 All the above benefits plus: • Invitation to a behind-the-scenes tour • Complimentary Dual Gift Membership • 15% discount on facility rentals PHOTO: BRANDON MABLY All the above benefits plus: PHOTOS: DARA N. KING PHOTOGRAPHY Remember: Senior Citizens (65+) receive a $5 discount at any level! Membership makes a great gift — a gift of so much more for your family and friends. To join, upgrade or renew your membership: Call 215.340.9800, visit MichenerArtMuseum.org or come to the museum in person! As always, thank you for your continued support. For program registration and information: MichenerAr tMuseum.or g N ON P R O F I T ORG A N IZ AT I ON U . S . P ost age PA I D L i s t m a st e r s 138 South Pine Street Doylestown, PA 18901 I M PO R TA NT: DATED M ATERIA L - DELIVER IMMEDIAT ELY The Michener Art Museum Hours and Admission Tuesday through Friday: 10:00 am to 4:30 pm; Saturday: 10:00 am to 5:00 pm; Sunday: noon to 5:00 pm Admission is Free for members. Location The James A. Michener Art Museum is located in Doylestown, Bucks County at 138 South Pine Street – adjacent to the Bucks County Free Library. Ample parking is available. Art Research Library & Archives By appointment only. Call 215.340.9800 x150 Walk-In Tours on Weekends Saturdays & Sundays at 2:00 pm; 45-minute docent-led tour of the Museum’s galleries. No registration required. FREE with Museum admission. Group Tours Bring your group to the Michener Art Museum for a docent-led or self-guided tour of the permanent collection, special exhibitions and outdoor sculpture. Customized, regional tour packages are available. Lunches can be provided with advance notice. For more information, contact the Group Tours Department at 215.340.9800 x124 or grouptours@michenerartmuseum.org. ENJOY YOUR SPECIAL EVENT IN A SPECTACULAR SETTING Accessible Programs The Michener Art Museum is an accessible destination for visitors of all abilities. Reserved parking, accessible restrooms, and wheelchairs provided. Arrangements may be made for sign language-interpreted tours. Materials and special tour programs are available for visitors who are visually and hearing impaired. Edgar N. Putman Event Pavilion Call 215.340.9800 for details